Pages - Region 2

Transcription

Pages - Region 2
American Hemerocallis Society
Spring/Summer 2000
Region 2/Great Lakes
Newsletter
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
American Hemer
ocallis Socie
ty National Of
Hemerocallis
Society
Offficer
icerss
National President
Ex
ecutiv
e Secret
ar
Executiv
ecutive
Secretar
aryy
Edit
or of The Da
ylily Journal
Editor
Daylily
Kay Day
7003 Woodridge Drive
Flower Mound, TX 75028-5873
[email protected]
Pat Mercer
P.O. Box 10
Dexter, GA 31019
[email protected]
James R. Brennan
37 Maple Avenue
Bridgewater, MA 02324
508-697-4802
[email protected]
1999-2000 R
egion 2 Of
Region
Offficer
icerss and Liaisons
Regional Vice President
Mary M. Milanowski
452 Collindale N.W.
Grand Rapids, Michigan 49504
(616) 453-3769
[email protected]
Regional Publicity Direct
or
Director
Ed Myers
5157 Bixford Avenue
Canal Winchester, Ohio 43110-8606
(614) 836-5456
[email protected]
Regional Edit
or
Editor
Regional Secret
ar
Secretar
aryy
Gene Dewey
2125 Fox Avenue
Madison, Wisconsin 53711-1920
(608) 255-0858
[email protected]
Gisela Meckstroth
6488 Red Coach Lane
Reynoldburg, Ohio 43068-1661
(614) 864-0132 (Fax: same number)
[email protected]
Virginia Myers
5157 Bixford Avenue
Canal Winchester, OH 43110-8606
(614) 836-5456
[email protected]
Regional Honor
s&A
wards Chair
Honors
Aw
ar
ds Region 2 Liaisons
AHS Honor
ards
Awar
Honorss & Aw
Regional Exhibition Judges Liaison
Philipp Brockington
573 E. 600 North
Valparaiso, Indiana 46363
(219) 462-4288
[email protected]
Drs. Jerry and Caroline Benser
2407 Vine Street
LaCrosse, Wisconsin 54601-3864
(608) 782-4417
[email protected]
Richard Ford
Box 55
Petersburg, Illinois 62675
(217) 632-3791
[email protected]
Regional YYouth
outh Liaison Co-chair
Co-chairss
Regional Gar
den Judges Liaison
Garden
AHS R
egion 2 Direct
or
Region
Director
Martha Seaman
8875 Fawn Meadow Lane
Cincinnati, Ohio 45242
(513) 791-5183
[email protected]
Regional TTreasurer
reasurer
The American
Hemerocallis
Society
Membership Rates
Individual (1 year) ................ $18.00
Individual (3 years) .............. $50.00
Family (1 year) ..................... $22.00
Family (3 years) ................... $60.00
Sustaining ........................... $65.00
Life .................................... $300.00
Youth ..................................... $8.00
Dues are to be paid by
January 1of each year.
Make checks payable to the AHS.
Mail to: Pat Mercer
P.O. Box 10
Dexter, GA 31019
[email protected]
Page2 Spring/Summer2000
Cynthia Blanchard
3256 S. Honeytown Road
Apple Creek, Ohio 44606-9047
(330) 698-3091
and
Carol Hauenstein
15409 Barrs Road SW
Dalton, Ohio 44618
(330) 833-7004
Regional W
ays & Means
Wa
Lea Ann and Don Williams
12246 Spurgeon Road
Lynnville, Indiana 47619-8065
(812) 922-5288
[email protected]
Regional Arc
hiv
es
Archiv
hives
Joanne Larson
49 Woodland Drive
Barrington, Illinois 60010-1912
(847) 381-1484
Phyllis Cantini
3140 Elder Road North
Orchard Lake, Michigan 48324-2416
(248) 363-2352
[email protected]
Edit
orial P
olicy
Editorial
Policy
The American Hemerocallis Society
Region 2/Great Lakes Newsletter is
published for the benefit of American
Hemerocallis Society members residing in Region 2. As such, the editorial
focus of the publication centers on:
• Hemerocallis.
• AHS and Region 2 events.
• Region 2 members and hybridizers.
Submissions are encouraged. The
editor reserves the right to edit for
space, grammar, and focus on the
three criteria cited above.
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
AmericanHemerocallisSociety
Spring/Summer2000
Table of Contents
Page
Director’s Report ................................................................................. 2
National Convention Calendar ........................................................... 2
RVP’s Message .................................................................................... 3
RPD’s Notes ......................................................................................... 4
Editor’s Message ................................................................................. 4
Financial Statement ........................................................................... 5
Youth Liaisons’ Message ..................................................................... 6
•Youth Activities for Region 2 Summer Meeting 2000 ............ 6
Features
•1999 Fall Midwest Hybridizers’ Meeting ................................. 7
•Region 2 Hybridizer: Bob Bearce .........................................8-9
•A Dream Comes True: Hybridizers Showcase Daylily Garden
10
•A Collection of Tributes to R. William Munson, Jr. 12-14
•Region 2 Symposium Auction Recap ............................ 15
•Iconoclast's Corner ................................................... 16-17
Region 2 Symposium 2000 ........................................................... 18-31
Region 2 Summer Meeting
•Agenda, Registration Information, Lodging, etc. .................... 32
•Registration Form and Meet Keynote Speaker Bob Ellison .. 33
•Region 2 Slide and Auction Plants Request ............................ 35
•Preview of Tour Gardens .................................................... 36-39
This and That from AHS to Region 2 News ..................................... 40
•Region 2 Calendar .................................................................... 40
•Future Region 2 Meetings/Englerth Award Information ....... 40
•Electing a Regional Vice President: It’s YOUR Responsibility!
•Regional Vice President Election Ballot .......................... 41
•Exhibition Judges Listing ........................................................ 45
•Garden Judges Listing ............................................................. 46
•Garden Judges (Workshops) Information ............................... 46
•AHS Personal Awards, Regional, and Local Awards Information 43
Club Information and Events Calendar ...................................... 47-50
New Members .............................................................................. 51-52
Advertisements ............................................... 7, 11, 15, 17, 28, 30, 34
Note:
Since PDF numbers pages beginning with the front cover, the page
numbers in this PDF version do not correspond to those in the printed
version. Add 2 to respective page numbers; for example, advertisements
would be found on pages 9, 13, 17, etc.
Front Cover:
The Garden of Elizabeth Raz of Palos Heights, Illinois.
Photo by Rosemary Balazs
THE AMERICAN
HEMEROCALLIS
SOCIETY
Region 2/Great Lak
es
Lakes
Da
ylily Ne
wsle
tt
er
Daylily
Newsle
wslett
tter
Deadlines
Spring/Summer Issue:
March 1
Fall/Winter Issue:
September 1
Out-of Region
Subscriptions
$10.00 per year
Make checks payable to
AHS Region 2 and send
to:
AHS Region 2 Treasurer
(see address on inside
front cover)
Displa
dv
er
tising
Displayy A
Adv
dver
ertising
Rat
es ffor
or Inside P
ages
Rates
Pages
Full Page .................. $70.00
Half Page .................. $45.00
Quarter Page ............ $30.00
Make checks payable to AHS
Region 2 and send it with your
request to the editor.
(please note the deadlines above)
Photos on inside pages: Unless otherwise indicated, all photos are by RPD Ed
Myers and Editor Gisela Meckstroth.
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
3
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
A Letter from our Director
by Martha Seaman
shape–not wealthy, but comfortable.
However, because Life Memberships have been a “losing” proposition for AHS for years, the Board
passed a motion to raise the Life
Membership dues to $500 (from
“But to me, the best
thing about the AHS is
the friends made within
the organization.
A true bargain!”
Martha Seaman
Martha Seaman
T
he question I'm asked most
often is, “Will the AHS
raise its annual dues?”
And the answer is “Not in the near
future!”
At its last meeting, the AHS Board
voted NOT to raise the annual dues
even though the AHS has the lowest dues of all the major plant societies. This means your national organization is in good financial
$300) and to create a Dual Life
Membership (two persons at the
same address) for $750. The Life Associate membership, which has
been confusing to many people, will
be eliminated, but the Board has
recommended a small fee ($50) for
those who wish to convert their current Life Associate status to Dual
Life Membership. All this was reported in the Spring 2000 issue of
The Daylily Journal (Does anyone
read the AHS Board minutes?), and
the required changes in the AHS
Constitution will be voted on by the
membership at the AHS Annual
Business Meeting in July.
Membership in the AHS is one of
the best bargains in the plant world.
AHS has a large and enthusiastic
membership–now nearly 12,000; it
produces a wonderful magazine and
many special publications; it sponsors scientific research about our
favorite plant, and it is the agent
for registering new cultivars.
But to me, the best thing about the
AHS is the friends made within the
organization. A true Bargain!
Have you seen the new
An Illustrated Guide to
DAYLILIES?
It is a 1999 publication of The
American Hemerocallis Society,
edited by Frances Gatlin, and with
illustrations by Cheryl Postlewait
and Elizabeth Schreiner.
If you would like to order a copy,
refer to the AHS Publication Order
Form in the back of each issue of
The Daylily Journal.
Looking ahead at the
National Con
Convvention Calendar
2000 ........... DelawareValleyDaylilySociety,Philadelphia,PA .................. July12-15 ............... 2000
2001 ........... NewEnglandDaylilySociety,Boston,MA ............................ July18-21 ............... 2001
2002 ........... SouthernMichiganHemerocallisSociety,Troy,MI ................. July16-20 ............... 2002
2003 ........... Mid-CarolinaDaylilySociety,Charlotte,NC .......................... June18-21 .............. 2003
2004 ........... TheGreaterSt.LouisHemerocallisSociety,St.Louis,MO ............. June30-July3.......... 2004
2005 ........... PensacolaHemerocallisSociety,Pensacola,FL....................... May18-21 .............. 2005
Page4 Spring/Summer2000
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
RVP Message
by Mary Milanowski
R
egion Two Growth – let's all
welcome all three of these new
clubs formed in 1999:
! Bay Area Daylily Buds in
northern Wisconsin,
! Daylily Society of Southern
Indiana located in the southeastern corner of southern
Indiana,
! Hoosier Daylily Society located in central Indiana
! And, just in case you can’t find
the Southwestern Illinois
Hemerocallis Society of Granite
City in the Region Two Club Listings on the inside back cover of
this newsletter, it is because the
club members changed its name
to Madison County Daylily
Society.
After completing three years now as
your RVP, if I were to compile an
RVP Wish List for the benefit of future RVP’s and for the AHS, this is
what it might look like:
1) That a small committee of AHS
members within each club work to
sponsor a Garden Judge Workshop I & II and to promote old and
new garden judges. You could call
this committee the “AHS Continuing Education Committee of (your
club name).” This committee could
even sponsor an Exhibition Judges
Clinic I.
In Region Two we have
dropped down below 50%
of our allotted 15% of
Garden Judge slots.
2) More participation in the AHS
Popularity Poll.
3) What a wonderful Region it
would be if each and every one
of the 25 Region Two local clubs
would either send a letter ask-
ing when they could sponsor
the next Region Two annual
summer meeting or sponsor an
annual meeting “partnering”
with another local club that is
fairly close by. In the last 15
years, the annual summer
meeting has been hosted by 10
clubs. Obviously, some have
done double duty.
4) Your club send a letter to the
club hosting the next annual
summer meeting asking what
you can do in the way of making the auction a success.
5) Hybridizers, backyard and
commercial, please participate
by sending your seedlings to
the next Englerth bed location.
Have you ever noticed how
popular the candidates in the
Englerth bed are each year?
This is a fun event where everyone gets to participate and
finds out the results the same
day! Just ask Dan Bachman,
winner of the 1999 Englerth
Award.
In short, you might say that I am
asking each of you to support
your Region.
Many of you already lend support, and to you I say Thank
You, as you are always there,
conducting clinics, sending in
your Popularity Poll ballots, returning surveys, hosting annual
meetings, and donating plants for
annual summer meeting plant
sales and auctions.
The next regional annual summer
meeting hosted by the Chicagoland
Daylily Society, July 21-23, 2000,
needs your help with plants–both,
sale table and auction. Let them
know what you can donate to the
event.
Next year, it will be Cincinnati’s
turn. This summer would be a
“Blue Daylilies”
RVP Mary Milanowski
good time to set aside some plant
divisions for them.
Have you sent your seedling(s) for
the Englerth bed? And to those hybridizers who have introductions on
the AHS Honors and Awards Ballot: Have you made plans to guest
your introductions in a tour-garden
bed? In 2002, the Southern Michigan Hemerocallis Society will be
hosting the National Convention in
the Troy area Are you “guesting”
your introductions for all to see?
Time is now to make those plans,
or will you let the South rise again?
Mark your Calendars
for Events in 2000:
♦July
12-15 National Convention, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
♦July 21, 22, 23 Regional Meeting, Chicago, Illinois
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
5
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
RPD Notes
Editor’s Message
A
s this edition of the
Region 2 Newsletter
goes to the printers, there are
signs of spring everywhere in
the garden.
Spring flowers are forming
buds and a few of the daylilies
are breaking through the
mulch (much too soon for
their own good).
After attending the Region 2
Symposium 2000 last week,
Ed Myers
listening to the speakers, and
seeing some of the future
introductions, I can hardy wait for another bloom
season to begin.
Everyone who did not get a chance to attend this
Symposium 2000 certainly missed a great program of
speakers that Curt Hanson assembled.
Again it is my job to remind all Region 2 members to
send in their Popularity Poll ballots before September
1st of this year 2000.
Last year 195 ballots were received, which was an
increase from previous years. I am sure our members of
Region 2 can do better this year, if we can just remind
all members to send in their ballots.
This year as an incentive for members to vote in the
Popularity Poll, voting members' names will be placed
in a drawing for one of 3 daylilies, COPPER ROYAL
(Carr), STREET URCHIN (Kirchhoff) and LADY
ARABELLA (Salter).
These daylilies have been donated by Richard Norris of
Ashwood Gardens, Glouster, Ohio.
And to make it easier to vote this year, you may send me
your vote by E-mail at [email protected] before
September 1, 2000.
Region 2 P
opularity P
oll
Popularity
Poll
in the Y
ear 2000
Year
Page6 Spring/Summer2000
V
20 ote
00 in
!
Bet
You
Your V
ote
Vo
will Count!
s a retiree, it is wonderful to be able to
work–without considering pay per job or pay per
hour. A certain age brings
valued benefits (xy@ >>?:” [+]
pwy!...whupps... and goodness gracious...is that age
65+?).
I hope you, along with me,
have noticed that changes
come more frequently and
more quickly as time goes
Gisela Meckstroth
by. Not even the cost of
printing this newsletter stands still! And, since you
Region 2 members work so hard to raise the money
for printing it, its costs should be held down, right?
The printer and editor are testing some cost-saving
methods on inside-pages that we may use in this or the
next issue. We also considered adding 4 inside pages of
color (perhaps for advertisers) for an additional cost of
$700 to $800 and another $1200 to $1500 for higher
quality, coated paper (which would be necessary to print
good color). Needless to say, because of its high cost,
the topic of “color on inside pages” has moved itself to
the very end of the priorities list .
Again, my sincere thanks to all who have given feedback about this newsletter, and a big Thank You to
all you willing members who have written articles
about our hybridizers, about our interesting regional
daylily topics, about the presentations at our–oh, so
wonderful–regional symposium in Cleveland, and
about your local club events. Region 2 has 25 local
clubs now, almost twice as many as it had about 6
years ago.
I do hope that all of you, who were not able to be at
the symposium, can read the articles in this issue
(even though–to get them all on 52 pages–a few are
in such small print) and feel that you were there with
us in spirit and that reading about the symposium
activities and the interaction between guest speakers
and daylily devotees will
make you want to reserve
that time slot next year!
Gisela
Don’t miss the Summer Mee
ting
Meeting
or the next Symposium.
Photo above was taken by:
MCDS Member Bill Johannes
Thank You
For sharing information
within our region.
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Stat
ement of Cash R
eceipts and Disbur
sements
tatement
Receipts
Disbursements
American Hemerocallis Society – Region 2
For the Period January 1, 1999 through December 31, 1999
BALANCE FROM PRIOR REPORT 12-31-98
Checking Account
Business Money Market Account
Certificates of Deposit
$
495.38
7,623.61
10,500.69
$18,619.68
RECEIPTS:
Mail Auction
99 Regional Meeting Auction
99 Regional Meeting Plant Sale
Publication Sales
Contributions
Newsletter:
Subscriptions
Advertising
Label Reimbursement
Interest
Symposium ’99: Registrations
Symposium ’99: Silent Auction
Symposium 2000: Registrations
TOTAL RECEIPTS
2,169.79
3,912.31
1,256.50
100.00
1,550.00
92.00
400.00
932.25
819.93
9,345.00
2,777.50
1,610.00
24,965.28
TOTAL OF BALANCE FORWARDED & RECEIPTS:
DISBURSEMENTS:
Mail Auction Bid Refunds
Mail Auction Expenses
Newsletter Printing
Postage
Miscellaneous
Symposium ‘99
Symposium 2000
Office Supplies
Printing & Postage
Regional Director Expense
Telephone
AHS Liability Insurance
RVP, RPD, and Editor Nat’l Convention
Contributions
Miscellaneous
TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS
43,584.96
815.28
79.40
11,524.00 *
1,613.18 *
584.24
9,534.10
571.31
179.57
457.92
500.00
491.96
424.00
250.00
392.90
102.45
27,520.31
BALANCE ON HAND 12-31-99
Checking Account
Business Money Market Account
Certificates of Deposit
*Note: These lines include $3,392 for printing and $400.76 for postage for the
Fall 98/Winter 99 issue; these costs were incurred in the 1998 fiscal year, but
were not invoiced until 1999. Henceforth, we expect to maintain payment for
two newsletter issues each fiscal year.
$16,064.65
3,108.61
1,671.26
11,284.78
$16,064.65
GeneL.Dewey,Treasurer–Region2
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
7
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Ano
ther Fir
st ffor
or R
egion 2:
Another
First
Region
Nic
k LLucius,
ucius, Fir
st Y
outh tto
oR
eceiv
e AHS Displa
tatus
Nick
First
Youth
Receiv
eceive
Displayy Garden S
Status
byCynthiaBlanchard
aving one’s garden accepted as a Display
Garden, is an honor for any gardener. Accomplishing this when you are 17 years old
becomes a newsworthy feat. Nicholas Lucius, a member of the Metropolitan Columbus Daylily Society, has
recently become the first youth member to apply for
and to receive A.H.S. Display Garden Status. Bravo,
Nick!
A high school junior, Nick lives in Gahanna, Ohio, with
his parents and three younger siblings. Those of you
attending last summer’s Region 2 Meeting in Columbus will remember touring the beautiful, manicured
Lucius Garden. Everyone in the family is involved in
gardening but Nick and his father, Charles, do much
of the manual labor. Charles has grown daylilies, along
with other perennials, for a long time. About five years
ago Nick became interested in hemerocallis, and their
daylily collection began enlarging. At the present time,
the family’s 3/4 acre property grows approximately 550
different cultivars. According to Nick, their wish list is
also rapidly expanding!
Some of Nick’s favorite daylilies include the Stamile
“Candy Series” and LAVENDER RAINBOW. Although
he enjoys collecting daylilies, Nick also likes the challenge of hybridizing. He bloomed 75 seedlings in the
garden this past summer and expects several hundred
Special Y
outh A
ctivities During
Youth
Activities
Region 2 Summer Meeting 2000
The Chicagoland Daylily Society, the host club, is offering a
special registration rate of $65 to youth members. If you
have never participated in a Region 2 Meeting, we encourage you to attend. The tour gardens are spectacular, the
food is great, you’ll meet interesting people dedicated to
the improvement of genus hemerocallis, and you’re sure to
come home with new plants for your garden! The youth will
be gathering together at least twice during the weekend
meeting, with the first meeting scheduled for Friday at 5
pm. We will be contacting youth registrants in June about
the activities we have planned.
Hope to see yyou
ou in Burr Ridge
Ridge,, Illinois!
Page8 Spring/Summer2000
Nick Lucius receiving a commemorative plaque
from MCDS President Pete Mondron.
Photo: Gisela Meckstroth
to bloom this coming summer. Hoping to see results
more quickly, he now has seedlings growing under
lights in the basement of his family’s home. His hybridizing program focuses on eyed daylilies and on
purple daylilies with white edges.
Those who know Nick comment on his willingness to
help, his strong work ethic, and his enthusiasm for
daylilies. What impressive acclaim for a gardener of
any age. It is heartening to see these qualities in one
of our Region 2 youth members. In the future, Nick
hopes to earn a college degree in business management
and, eventually, operate his own landscaping business.
We wish him well in his dreams and aspirations, and
we look forward to hearing more about him in the daylily future.
Congratulations Nick, on your A.H.S. Display
Garden Status. Well done!
Did yyou
ou kno
w...
know
that an AHS Y
outh
Youth
member
ship costs only
membership
$8 per yyear?
ear?
Seeinsidefrontcoverfordetails.
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
1999 FFall
all Midw
est Hybridizer
s’ Mee
ting
Midwest
Hybridizers’
Meeting
Bret S. Clement, Indiana
The 1999 Fall Midwest Hybridizers’ Meeting was held
at the Wegerzyn Horticultural Center in Dayton, Ohio,
on November 13, 1999. Both established and aspiring
hybridizers were in attendance. Dan Bachman, whose
BEN BACHMAN won the 1999 Englerth award,
showed his many hued spider and unusual-form creations. Dan noted that his program really got established after picking a small number of cultivars with
good plant habits for breeding purposes. Judging from
the parentage of some of the slides of his older seedlings,
these cultivars included SPIDER MIRACLE, COBURG
FRIGHT WIG, and WILSON SPIDER. Dan indicated
that his own seedlings are now involved in most of his
crosses. Among the many slides he showed was one displaying a very prominent eye out of MARKED BY
LYDIA. Dan added that MBL is both pod fertile and
hardy. Dan has also been doing some tetraploid crosses,
and he showed slides of offspring involving HIGHLAND PINCHED FINGERS and TET SPINDAZZLE.
Jamie Gossard concluded the morning session’s slide
presentation with an eclectic selection of spider- and
unusual-form seedlings. While Jamie uses much converted tetraploid material, he is not one to stick to existing spider stock for breeding purposes, as evidenced
by slides of spidery seedlings involving MOONLIT
MASQUERADE, ROYAL BRAID, STARTLE, RASPBERRY CANDY, and SPACECOAST STARDUST,
among others. While Jamie concentrates on the spidery forms, he showed a few slides of more conventional forms
Some of the Fall 1999 Midwest Hybridizers
(Photo by Bret Clement)
(continued on page 14)
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! Catalog $2 (refundable with first order)
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Spring/Summer 2000 Page
9
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Hybridizer: Bob Bear
ce
Bearce
by Rosemary Balazs and Bill Sevetson
clump. The garden began slowly with borders around
trees and planted with perennials and some annuals.
Fortunately, while scanning a magazine, Bob saw an
ad for daylilies featuring Wild and Russell cultivars
(SHIRLEY WILD, Bechthold 52, and CRESTWOOD
ANN, Fay-Griesbach 61, were very special). His interest
led him to meeting Brother Charles Reckamp and to
seeing all his work. That meeting led him to Orville
Fay, a half mile away from Reckamp. Both were very
generous in sharing their knowledge (and pollen).
Brother Charles even potted up plants for Bob, but Fay
washed the roots clean on those plants he gave to Bob.
They were his mentors, and he learned from Fay: “If
you are going to do any hybridizing, always start with
the best things available.”
Bob Bearce in his Garden
B
ob was born in Chicago, he spent his working career in export management, and he retired in 1985.
He’s been interested in gardening most of his life, as
both of his grandmothers were avid flower gardeners.
Bob grew vegetables as well as flowers in his younger
days. While in his teens, a high school course in botany
sparked his interest in hybridizing as well as in growing daylilies from seed. However, his initial hybridizing efforts dealt with gladiolas. His interest was put
aside for a few years when he moved from home and
lived in an apartment on Chicago’s near north side.
In the 50’s, Bob bought a house with a small 25-foot lot
that had lots of crabgrass, which he removed clump by
While Bob was also very interested in painting in the
late 50’s and early 60’s, hybridizing became his No. 1
hobby, and he pretty much put aside his brushes until
his retirement 14 years ago.
Bob purchased his first seeds from Howard Hite; this
was a “five seeds of this, and five seeds of that” kind of
purchase. He started them indoors.
In the early 70’s, Bob attended the Chicagoland (CDS)
flower show at McCormick Place. He went to the
Chicagoland Daylily Society booth and met Walter
Jablonski who invited him to join CDS. He joined in
1972.
Bob registered his first daylily, GRAPE JELLY, in
1976. Another seven years passed before he registered
LUSTY LITTLE LULU in 1983. In the mid 80’s, Jack
Romine of California introduced SMALL FAVORS from
seeds that Bob had sent him. All of his registrations
are tetraploids. He doesn’t have any diploids in his
garden.
Then, in 1990, Bob introduced SWEET BUTTER
CREAM, TAHITIAN SUNRISE, DESERT MIRAGE,
MARDI GRAS DRAGON, MINILITO, RASPBERRY
TRUFFLES, TANGOR, and WEST SIDE STORY.
BURLINGBELLE
Page10 Spring/Summer2000
SWEET BUTTER CREAM, a tall late yellow, and TAHITIAN SUNRISE, a very late red, proved to be the
most popular of the group. Bob discovered the keen
interest that many daylily lovers have in late-blooming cultivars. However, their lateness tends to make it
more difficult to work with them. There are very few
shows for late bloomers to win awards. Bob is still interested in one of his 1980’s goals: Miniature tetraploids, that is, blossoms under 3 inches. However, he
believes results are easier to achieve in the small 3- to
4-inch category.
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Bob had lived on Burling Street in Chicago for a number of years before he moved to his present home in
Park Ridge, Illinois, in the early 80’s. In 1994, he introduced the first of his “Burling” series of daylilies.
At that time, he was sending seeds to Al Rogers at
Caprice Farm Nursery in Sherwood, Oregon. Al germinated BURLING STREET, and it was jointly registered by Bob and Al. BURLING STREET has been
highly regarded by many guests in the Sevetson garden, and it is currently sold by Caprice Farm Nursery.
It blooms over a long mid to late season. It is 24 inches
tall, has a 4-inch flower, and it is dormant. Its color is
pale cream-pink with a dark pink halo, a yellow throat,
a green heart, and it has nicely ruffled, gold petal edges.
It tends to average four-way branching with 25 or more
buds. It is a very attractive garden flower.
Bob then introduced BURLING BARON and BURLING
DAWN in 1998, followed by BURLING BELLE in 1999.
BURLING BARON (30/6/MLa/DOR) is a creamy blend,
and it has a dusty rose eye and edge with a green throat.
BURLING DAWN (24/5/MLa/DOR) is warm peachpink, ruffled with golden filigree edges and a small
green throat. BURLING BELLE (24/4-1/2/MLa/DOR)
is a strong, shocking pink with a heavily ruffled gold
edge. All Bearce registrations are known for bud count
and branching. You will be able to see 9 of Bob’s registrations, including the “Burlings” mentioned above, at
the Sevetson garden during the Region 2 Summer
Meeting 2000 hosted by CDS.
Bob has been active in AHS events as well as in those
of CDS. He was the AHS Round Robin Chairman from
1977 to 1981, and he was International Secretary from
1981 to 1990. He also served as Corresponding Secretary of CDS for about 6 years.
Bob’s registrations are now being handled by Dale
Thomas of Thomas Gardens, 507 Race Horse Road,
Hanover, PA 17331-8849. In Dale’s 1999 catalog, he
discussed his late breeding program and pointed out
that he used LUSTY LITTLE LULY very heavily in
that program. His catalog lists all of the “Burlings”
except BURLING STREET.
SWEETBUTTERCREAM
BURLINGSTREET
Bob currently divides his time between his two primary loves, daylilies and painting. Keep watching for
new “Burling” registrations. We are sure you will be
pleased with them. He is one of the few hybridizers
who breed for northern gardens.
Editor’s note:
Photos are by Bill Sevetson. Bill Sevetson writes that this article had originally been written by Rosemary Balazs for the
Chicagoland DS Bulletin some time ago. Bill used Rosemary’s article (with her permission) as a starting point for this
Region 2 Newsletter article.
DID Y
OU KNO
W ...?
YOU
KNOW
The American Hemerocallis Society can be found on the World Wide Web.
Surf the Net and learn more about daylilies!
The URL is: http://www.daylilies.org/daylilies.html
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
11
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
A Dream Comes TTrue
rue
by Phyllis Cantini
he Hybridizers Showcase Daylily Garden, an
official AHS Display Garden, located within the
Garden Park in Holly, Michigan, is the work of
daylily visionary Joan Kepf and her two supporters,
Linda Boyd and Mary Coakley, who caught the spirit
of Joan’s dream. Joan’s dream was to have a garden
that would contain the lifetime work of hybridizer Bill
Munson Jr. and other hybridizers. The Garden Park,
consisting of 77 acres, is a country setting in Holly,
Michigan, and it can be accessed easily from I-75. The
Park is the dream of the Hilty family who wanted to
create a series of specialty gardens: Butterfly Garden,
Japanese Garden, Rose Garden, etc.
The Hybridizers Showcase Daylily Garden developed
with the help of Loren Hilty and the use of his heavyduty equipment to sculpt the garden area by moving
boulders, trees, and shrubs, and by bringing in top soil,
Garden Park in Holly, Michigan
mulches, and watering systems. The area was designed
(1999 Photo by Joan Kepf)
and planted by Joan, Linda, and Mary, who with determination and dedication worked through mud, rain, cold, backaches, and endless hours to accomplish the
dream. Joan secured donations of perennials, trees and shrubs that dress up the gardens to achieve continuous
bloom throughout the growing season.
Joan searched the country for plants representative of each of the years covering each hybridizer’s lifetime
work. Visitors will see daylilies showcased from hybridizers such as:
"
"
"
"
"
"
Anderson
Applegate
Apps
Benz
Carpenter
The Couturiers
"
"
"
"
"
"
Dickerson
The Doughertys
Elliott
Gates
Ra Hansen
Curt Hanson
"
"
"
"
"
"
Henry
Hite
The Joiners
Kamensky
Kirchhoff
Lambertson
"
"
"
"
"
"
Moldovan
Morss
Munson
Pickles
Reed
The Reinkes
"
"
"
"
"
Rice
TheSalters
Sharp
Sikes
Trimmer
The uniqueness of this garden is that each hybridizer’s cultivars are planted together in individual sections. This
gives the viewer an overall look of the hybridizers' progress and their particular “mark” or special goals they were
trying to achieve in their breeding programs. Munson’s cultivars are laid out according to the year of registration
beginning with 1956 and continuing to the present. Each hybridizer’s section has a marker with his or her name,
but a specially engraved stone marks Munson’s section (Bill was working on the design of this stone at the time
of his death.) A separate area is devoted to the winners of the Region 2 Howard Hite Award for Hybridizing
Excellence (Note: No Hite Award was awarded in 1991). This Award Garden is laid out according to the year in
which the award was won, and with a sampling of cultivars representative of each winner’s work from its inception:
"
"
"
Dr. Charles Branch, 1990
Bryant Millikan, 1992
Brother Charles Reckamp, 1993
"
"
"
Steve Moldovan, 1994
Howard Hite, 1995
Dr. Robert Griesbach, 1996
"
"
"
Dennis Anderson, 1997
Curt Hanson, 1998
Marge Soules, 1999
Since this is still an evolving garden, there is plenty of room for future winners. Joan, Linda, Mary, and Loren
have turned this virgin land into a showcase for all to see and enjoy. They stand proud of this unique and,
perhaps, only garden of its kind in the U.S.A. that honors the beauty of each hybridizer's daylilies. They invite
you to visit the Hybridizers Showcase Daylily Garden. For information about hours, maps, and directions, please
contact Joan Kepf at 248-363-9627 or write to her at 6100 Carroll Lake Road, Commerce Township, MI 483823616.
"Hand in hand come walk awhile
Our finished dream will make you smile”
by Joan Kepf
Page12 Spring/Summer2000
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Twin Beech Gardens
5846 Beecher Road, S.W.
Available in 2000
•
•
Granville OH 43023
•
740-927-9275
Supply Very Limited
JACK SPRAT (Warrell 99) 29" EM Dor Ext Fragrant Dip
An 8-1/2" Spider Variant (4.0:1 ratio) orchid purple self with light orchid
watermark above a gold-green throat. Four branches, 20 buds.
(STARSEARCH x SATIN BIRD). ....................................................... $75
ORCHID MAJESTY (Warrell 99) 25" EM Dor Ext Dip
A 9" Crispate orchid rose blend with slight eyezone blending to a yellow
throat with a small green heart. Multi-branching, 15 buds (MONSTER x
SATIN BIRD) ........................................................................................ $75
CHIEF BLACK HAND (Warrell 99) 36" MLa Dor Ext Dip
A 6-1/2" Spatulate which is a smooth satiny black-red self with a yellowgreen throat. Multiple branching with 23 buds (HOLLY DANCER x
BLACK PLUSH). ................................................................................. $90
MIGHTY THOR (Warrell 99) 34" M Dor Ext Tet
A 9" red-orange self with yellow halo shading to small green throat. A
very tailored widespread beacon. Four branches, 19 buds (MONSTER x
ROYAL ORANGE) ................................................................................ $60
Previous Introductions
STARSEARCH 96 • A 7-1/2" very pale yellow star-shaped Dor Dip ...........
LITTLE LIMELIGHT 96 • 3-1/4" yellow, intense green throat Dor Dip ....
RINGS AND THINGS 95 • 6" curly pink Dor dip .........................................
GRASS ROOTS 95 • 8-1/2 lemon yellow widespread Dip dor ......................
PEACH FLOAT 94 • 7-1/2 spidery melon Dor Dip .......................................
HOLLY DANCER 88 • 7" spidery bright red with green throat Dor Dip ....
$60
$35
$30
$20
$15
$15
Postage ffor
or order
s:
orders:
$6.00
plus
$25centsperplant.
Please visit http://www.primenet.com/~tjfehr/daylily.html
From this link, click on Daylily Image Archive, and there you will find a folder of Dorothy Warrell's registered
cultivars and of her seedlings. It is not a complete listing of all of Warrell's creations but it represents what was
blooming last summer (All web-site photos courtesy Juli Hyatt. With permission from Tim Fehr.)
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
13
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
A Collection of T
ribut
es tto
o R. William Munson, Jr
Tribut
ributes
Jr..
After a message telling of the passing of one of greatest and most well-known daylily hybridizers came across the
computer screens of our AHS E-mail Robin members on October 3, 1999, a great outpouring of feelings began. Within
minutes and hours, over one thousand AHS members read about this irreversible event, and daylily devotees from all
parts of North America and many parts of the world shared their thoughts and memories of this great man so freely
over the next few days. Here, with each writer's permission and with only a slight bit of editing, are some of their
spontaneous feelings put into words.
AHS E-mail Robin Member Gisela Meckstroth
From: Pam Erikson <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Date: Sunday, October 03, 1999 8:24 PM
Subject: Mr. Munson
Hi all:
It was with great sadness that I read about Bill Munson tonight.
For as long as I can remember, HIS was the name first and
foremost in my mind whenever anyone asked me about the
truly important steps made in hybridizing. His contributions to
the daylily world will live on forever in all of our gardens, and
his cultivars will be used in many more generations of daylilies
yet to come. My deepest sympathies to all his family and
friends who are mourning this tragic loss.
Pam Erikson, B.C. Canada - Region 8, zone 7
To all,
From: Bob Roycroft <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, October 06, 1999 12:31 AM
Subject: Bill Munson
Thank you all for the posts concerning Bill Munson. I have only
met him through what I have read and heard and through some
of his fabulous daylilies—we currently grow 22 of his introductions and all of these reportedly grow well over a wide range of
climate zone; no wimps in these 22! We and our staff routinely
make a blanket statement to our cold-climate, walk-in customers that the 20 Munson evergreens we currently offer should do
well for them. This blanket statement concerning evergreens is
made only for Bill Munson’s evergreens—not for any other
hybridizer’s. I’ve heard stories about how this great Florida hybridizer approached breeding for cold hardiness but it is second
and third hand info. Could some knowledgeable person share the
true story with the Robin and also mention those who were instrumental in assisting him in accomplishing this cold hardiness
with so many of his evergreens?
I stood in our garden on yesterday’s October morning and had
some quiet time just looking at a clump of Bill Munson’s famous OLIVE BAILEY LANGDON (1974) in a display bed with
three blooming scapes and four new scapes emerging. It is special to see such performance so late in the year; visiting with
one of his intros, in its full glory, was extra special. (I also recalled that it was Ra Hansen who first recommended OLIVE
BAILEY LANGDON to me for its showy very early bloom, and,
then for its showy very late bloom.)
My absolute favorite Munson cultivar is AFRICAN GRAPE—a
1991 registration. I am amazed that Eureka lists only six growers who offer it. AFRICAN GRAPE is robust with the most beautiful foliage imaginable; a good increaser; great branching and
bud count on its sturdy 28" tall scapes; a cold-hardy evergreen;
and, the 6" rich claret purple blooms are sunfast! This daylily
has “Stout” written all over it, in my opinion, and to my knowledge has not had the necessary distribution and exposure to even
win a lesser award. (Someone please correct me if I am mistaken.)
Page14 Spring/Summer2000
The lack of recognition is probably largely due to the fact that its
first (of several) scapes start blooming in late mid-season—approximately 7-10 days after most Regionals and the National (as
is the case with many “unknown” greats).
Clarence and Beth Crochet visited our nursery in July. Clarence
was so impressed with AFRICAN GRAPE that he left with three
multiple-fan three-gallon pots of it! So, soon Eureka will have
another grower who offers it. Great! I’m sure that Clarence and
Beth will do a fantastic job in helping to promote and spread this
wonderful introduction of Bill’s to many. Maybe it will soon be
universally recognized for the great daylily it is! (We shortly plan
to have AFRICAN GRAPE as the “Featured Cultivar of the Week”
on our new web site which came on line last Sunday.
Bill Munson, your presence will be felt each summer for decades
to come in all of our gardens whether we had the pleasure of personally meeting you or not. Thanks for the pleasure you give us!
Sincerely,
Bob Roycroft, Roycroft Daylily Nursery
Georgetown, SC (lower zone 8)
Nursery e-mail: [email protected]
http://www.roycroftdaylilies.com
From: Jeanne Norris
<[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, October 05, 1999 3:11 PM
Subject: Bill Munson, we will miss you.
If you never had the opportunity to meet Bill Munson, you may
still be the recipient of his God given talents in hybridizing
daylilies. He was a master of his “trade”. Munson cultivars are
grown in all sections of the world.
The first time I heard his name was in the early 1960’s. When I
would make my yearly pilgrimages to Ophelia Taylor’s garden,
just outside of Silver Springs. She always had such high praise
for Bill Munson. Bill, she explained, was a young man in
Gainesville who was doing great things in his hybridizing program with daylilies. She also spoke very highly of his mother,
Ida. We were growing TOVARICH (1965), a beautiful dark red
daylily, hybridized by R. Munson. Ophelia was quick to correct
me and told me, he was the Senior and Bill was the Junior. We
were friends with another hybridizer who lived in DeLand, named
Connie Fleishel. Connie was a protegee of both, Bill and Ophelia.
We would be visiting her garden, and sometimes, she would have
to leave to meet the Greyhound bus. Bill had telephoned earlier
that day and said he was sending her some special pollen. She
had to rush to meet the bus, pick it up her priceless package, and
put in the refrigerator to use for the next days crosses. Bill named
a special cultivar for her, ALENE CONSTANCE FLEISHEL
(1968).
Our first trip to the Munson garden was at their home across the
“tracks” from Shands Hospital. Bill & I invited Ed & Mary Helen
(continued next page)
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Tributes to R. William Munson, Jr. (continued)
Kirchhoff (David’s parents) to drive up to Gainesville with us one
Sunday afternoon. Ida had placed the garden chairs in front of a
bed of the most beautiful rose pink daylilies that we had ever
seen. BRIGHT CLOUDS (1969) was in full bloom. BC had not
been introduced, but after much raving over its beauty, Ed worked
his charm on Ida. He went home with a prized fan. BRIDAL
SATIN (1969) was one of the first of Bill Munson cultivars that
we grew. If you can find it in a garden today, you would still be
enchanted by its beauty. ANTE BELLUM (1961) and “Bridal
Satin” were used extensively by many of the earlier hybridizers
in their programs.
Bill and his family moved to their new home, Wimberlyway (WW)
in 1968. My Mother and I had to live in a motel, in Gainesville,
for three months while my Father was a patient at Shands Hospital. To break the monotony of being at the hospital all day, I
would drive Mother out to WW for a short visit with Ida and Bill.
They were always so gracious to us. I wish I could have taken her
there during bloom season, but this was September through November.
There are several of us who live in this area, that were privileged
to be invited to their home for Ida’s January birthday celebrations. It was like a second Christmas party. Bloom season was
always another excuse for many of us to steal away and head for
WW for the weekend. As we drove into the driveway, we would
be greeted by a sea of daylilies as far as we could see. The array
of colors was breathtaking. The next day, Sunday, we were up
with the sun, leave our motels and head for Wimberly Way. There
would be breakfast in the gardens. Bill, Ida, Betty, and Elizabeth
Ann would be chasing around with all of us, weaving in and out
of the numerous daylily beds. They would be pointing out the
newest seedlings and introductions. I remember one day when
were at lunch (eating those delicious home grown tomatoes Ida
always grew), I asked Bill, “How did you get those dainty gold
edges on PORCELAIN WREN (1980)? With a very serious look
on his face, he answered, “Well, Jean, when all of you are asleep,
I take a little pot of gold paint and go out and paint each bloom
before any of you arrive.” Then he threw his head back and laughed
and laughed. Bill had a wonderful sense of humor.
The last time we saw Bill was this past May. We were on our way
to the Region 12 Spring Regional in Lake City. Bill & I stopped at
WW to visit Betty and her husband Joe. Betty knew that we had
been having trouble coming up with a good definition for a “Patterned Daylily.”. She suggested that Sunday, on our way home,
that we stop by. If Bill felt like it, we could visit with him and
discuss the definition. That is what we did. Bill’s voice was very
low, but the enthusiasm and love for the daylilies was evident.
Betty ran out to the garden a couple of times to bring him blooms
of his STRAWBERRY CUPCAKE (1992) and several seedlings.
He cupped each one in his hands and with his long fingers, gently pointed out the pattern in each one. Just watching Bill, as he
held each flower in his hands, was like watching someone holding a precious treasure, being very careful not to crush it. I still
have a very warm feeling in my heart when I think about that
day.
Bill was very touched that the members of Region 12 voted to
honor him with an award in his name. It was his wish that the
award be for a patterned daylily.
We are so thankful that he knew how much the people in Region
12 “treasured” him. We have been working to establish a R.W.
Munson, Jr. Award for a “Patterned Daylily” on the Awards and
Honors Ballots. Our prayer is that it will become a fact and not
just a dream.
Many have written about Bill Munson being a legend, and being
the steering force in the hybridizing of the tetraploid daylily,
and about his generosity in sharing his knowledge about daylilies, but “my” Bill & I will always remember him as a very special man that we were privileged to call our friend. Bill's cultivars are classics and will always be considered so, as long as
daylilies are in existence. We will miss him, but we can sing his
praises over and over, every time we see a “Munson” daylily.
Jean Norris, AHS Region 12 Director, Sanford, FL
From: Patricia Loveland <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, October 06, 1999 6:31 AM
Subject:
Remembering
Bill
Munson
Dear Robins, This is Pat Loveland, from Western Oregon, Reg.
8. I was but a newbie a few years ago (1994) when I consulted
Bill Munson’s HEMEROCALLIS, The Daylily for advice on choosing some of my first daylilies. I remember one, in particular,
FRED HAM, which was described as being “Very Special”. This
summer, I was reminded of those words when my piece of FRED
HAM bloomed those huge voluptuous blooms nonstop for much
of my bloom period. Other classic daylilies described in that book,
and that have made a statement in my garden this season are
COURT MAGICIAN and MALAYSIAN MONARCH, both with
that famous watermark or “chalky” eye. The hybridizer of these
plants, Bill Munson, was something special himself, so I learned
from the article by Ted Petit that appeared in the Spring 1995
issue of The Daylily Journal. Before the 1997 AHS convention
in Jacksonville FL, Diane Taylor, Diana Grenfell, Roger Grounds
and I were traveling together touring gardens. Ted Petit suggested that we stop by Wimberlyway Gardens. How glad I am
we took his advice, and how I treasured those moments when
Bill Munson came out and chatted with us, and answered Diana’s
many questions as she gathered information for her book.
Mr. Munson’s memory will live on in the many beautiful daylilies that have descended from the products of his dedication and
persistence in the face of overwhelming odds.
Pat Loveland, Corvallis, in Western Oregon AHS Region 8, USDA
Zone 8
From: Boyd Farar, Corpus Christi, Texas
[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, October 06, 1999 5:28 PM
Subject: Tribute to Bill Munson
Boyd Farar Corpus Christi, TX AHS Reg. 6 USDA Zone 9
Not many people who were raised in Arizona and other arid
states know about daylilies and other assorted perennials. I was
one of those. I knew I could grow flowers and plants but I did not
really know until I moved to Florida in 1979. I was living in
Gainesville, Florida and had a friend who was studying landscape architecture at the University of Florida (Yea, GO
GATORS!). Anyway, my friend said lets go visit this garden,
you’ll like it. Well, to keep this message short, we went to
Wimberlyway Gardens. I did not know daylilies nor do I remember ever seeing any. It would not surprise any of you to know
that I was hook from that first visit. I especially enjoyed walking the wide avenues between very large rows with large hedges
(continued next page)
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
15
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Tribut
es tto
o R. William Munson, Jr
ributes
Jr..(cont.)
1999 FFall
all Midw
est Hybridizer
s’ Mee
ting (cont. from page 7)
Midwest
Hybridizers’
Meeting
at the backs of each one. It was wonderful looking at all the daylilies from Bill, Betty, Ida and Elizabeth. I started collecting as
many of Bill’s as I could find. The inexpensive ones, of course. I
visited Wimberlyway several times each Spring until I moved to
Texas in 1990.
I did not meet Bill but have had a couple conversations with Betty
Hudson. When I would order from Wimberlyway, I would always
write Go Gators! on the envelopes and Betty would always write
Go Gators! on the receipts! I have fond memories of Wimberlyway.
I have had many cultivars of Bill’s and will always have as many
as I can keep. I like the larger flowers and all those big bold eyes;
I like tea stained eyes and clear colorful daylilies. My favorites
include: PALACE LANTERN, CHEYENNE SKIES, OLIVE
BAILEY LANGDON, DEVIL’S MAGIC, SILVER ICE, SILVER
MIST, IDA’S MAGIC (Ida’s), BORGIA QUEEN, GRAND OPERA,
KATE CARPENTER (the closest one to getting the Stout), RUSSIAN RHAPSODY, CAROLYN HENDRIX...Oh, I must stop! The
daylily world will not be the same and will miss Bill’s contributions. Thank you for all you’ve done, Bill! And, thank you to all
who have written other messages. Go in peace!
including a fringed, toothed gem from ENCHANTED APRIL
x FOREST LAKE RAGAMUFFIN. Several slides of his kids
from a converted HOLLY DANCER x MIGHTY HIGHTY
TIGHTY–while impressive–were even more stunning in
person when I visited his garden this past summer. These
seedlings bring HD’s intense red coloration into the tet
spider gene pool. Jamie also showed a slide of an absolutely stunning Dan Hansen’s HAPPY APACHE. While
not as narrow as tetraploid spider fanciers might strive
for, HA is out of Dan’s 1999 ROSES IN SNOW, which has
passed its wide white edge onto a narrower form.
The slide presentations concluded with John Benz showing slides of some of his recent work. The sheer number of
interesting seedlings prevents me from even beginning to
do justice in describing this slide show. Among the parents producing his possible future introductions are TET
From: TAHIR
NADEEM<[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, October 05, 1999 8:40 PM
Subject: BILL MUNSON
Dear Daylily Friends
All daylily lovers in PAKISTAN are saddened on the sad
demise of Bill Munson. He will certainly live through his
beautiful creations of color and form in our gardens. God
may bless his soul to live in peace for ever.
Tahir Nadeem, From Islamabad, Pakistan.
One bit of advice passed on by John was that TET GRAND
MASTERPIECE should be used only with cultivars possessing heavy substance; otherwise, the resulting offspring
will not open well. Also newsworthy was the fact that
Jamie Gossard has finally convinced John to work with
spiders, and a slide of RED SUSPENDERS x TET BLACK
PLUSH is indicative of John’s ability to transfer his knowledge to other arenas. John concluded by showing 10 slides
from Dan Trimmer. It is enough to point out that Dan Trimmer will remain on the cutting edge of “daylilydom” for some
time to come.
Lest one think that the day’s activities were confined to slide
presentations, interesting discussions on a variety of topics
abounded. Dick Norris reported a possible break among
his seedlings. He related that he had bloomed a purpleeyed cultivar that had no colored edge, but that had purple
tentacles. No one else could recall ever seeing anything
similar. Other discussion topics included: reluctant pod
parents, most fertile pod and most fertile pollen tetraploids,
soil amendments, and more. One interesting topic of these
discussion explored whether or not there was any merit in
attempting to achieve bloom on seedlings within nine
months. Nearly everyone agreed that little was gained in
most cases, because the bloom on such immature seedlings
was generally not representative of its future blooms. Only
where the 9-month bloom was obviously of unusual quality,
was this advantage perceived: that of being able to use the
seedling for breeding purposes a year earlier than otherwise would be the case.
From: Timothy J. Fehr <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, October 05, 1999 8:30 PM
Subject: Tributes
Gentle Robins:
I have been touched by many of the tributes to Bill
Munson. He touched so many of our lives through his
writing, his flowers and in person.
His book, Hemerocallis: The Daylily was the spark that
started my infatuation with daylilies.
Tim Fehr Eau Claire, WI USDA Zone 3-4 AHS Region 2
Editor’s note:
Many of the October 3 email messages had been printed in
the Fall/Winter 99 Region 4 Newsletter issue. The messages
here have been selected from additional ones of those days.
RUFFLED PERFECTION, TET BARBARA MITCHELL,
STARTLE, TET CHRISTMAS IS, TET GRAND MASTERPIECE,
JANET BENZ, TET JEDI BRENDA SPANN, TET JEDI DOT
PIERCE, TET NEAL BERRY, ANGEL’S SMILE, ONE STEP BEYOND, IDA’S BRAID, and many others.
Thank YYou,
ou, Shirle
armer
our hard w
or
Shirleyy FFarmer
armer,, for all yyour
wor
orkk in
putting on yyet
et another successful meeting
meeting..
DID Y
OU KNO
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ou can...
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$ SurftheNetandlearnmoreaboutdaylilies?
$ VisittheAmericanHemerocallisSocietyWeb-Siteaddressat:
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.da
ylilies.org/da
ylilies.html ?
http://www.da
.daylilies.org/da
ylilies.org/daylilies.html
$ Youcan“travel”tomanyinterestingdaylilysitesbyclickingonlinksontheAHSWeb
Site? (If you don't have a computer, visit your local library. Friendly librarians will be glad
to help you navigate the high seas of the Internet.
Page16 Spring/Summer2000
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000 – W
OW – What an A
uction!
WO
Auction!
one other than our new AHS President Kay Day
and the esteemed, master entertainer and wellknown hybridizer David Kirchhoff orchestrated
an outstandingly successful and lively auction of daylily cultivars–donated by so many generous regional
and out-of-region AHS members, a marvelous pen and
ink daylily drawing by Linda Michaels of Region 4, an
AHS Life Membership donated by Kay Day herself,
and the first edition, Daylilies: the Wild Species and Garden
Clones, Both Old and New, of the Genus Hemerocallis, by A.
B. Stout. First Edition, New York, Macmillan, 1934, donated
by Bob O’Neal, and garnered by Scott Bennett.
Thank You
to all you
donors and
bidders of the
Region 2
Symposium
2000
Auction
Right:
Kay Day
and
David Kirchhoff
orchestrating an
exciting and
financially
successful
auction benefitting Region 2
Here are guest speaker Kathy Guest’s (Region 4) words
to the AHS E-mail Robin (printed with her permission):
“But the banquet was the real treat. Kay Day and The
David are like Burns and Allen, Lucy and Desi, Astaire
and Ginger...deftly working the crowd, keeping them
laughing and buying until long after this girl had to
turn in. Some very special moments included the auctioning of an original artwork by Linda Michaels of
Bob Schwarz’s GHOSTDANCER. David managed to
get the price up to $300 almost instantly–disappointing Bob, who really wanted it (pen and ink and very, very
beautiful). And then Kay, who was the successful bidder, presented her prize to Mimi–which brought the room
down. Bob was then the successful bidder for a lifetime membership for both him and Mimi–no doubt in the
afterglow of Kay’s beautiful gesture. And friends, there is NO-ONE who can work a room like David Kirchhoff.”
by Gisela Meckstroth
Ellison Perennials
1011 Brooke Road " Rockford, IL 61109
15) 229-5
459 • Fax: (8
15) 229-5
459 • Evening Phone: (8
15) 226-8298
• Da
Dayy Phone: (8
(81
229-5459
(81
229-5459
(81
E-mail: [email protected] " http://www.gardensights.com/ellison/
Ellison Perennials has one of the most complete selections of modern daylily varieties in the Midwest. We are also guesting seedlings from other well-known hybridizers. Ellison Perennials grows an extensive line of perennials including most of the
new Terra-Nova introductions.
Come and visit us during
Daylily Bloomfest 2000
and see some of the prettiest seedlings around.
Dates of Bloomfest:
July 5-9, July 12-16, and July 19-23 from 9 am to 5 pm each day.
We are easy to reach from Interstate 90 or Interstate 39.
Catalog on request. The $2.00 cost of our catalog is deductible from your order.
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
17
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Iconoclast’s Corner
ByJimShields,Indiana
T
he opportunity to address a captive audience, as it were, is just
about irresistible. When I was invited to write a bit for the Newsletter, it seemed like a pretty simple
thing to do. As it happened, as soon
as I had said my diffident “probably
yes” I found myself at a loss for
words. Fortunately, the deadline
for this issue was so far away at that
moment that I was reasonably
hopeful that something would occur
to me by the time it was required.
We suffer from a certain compulsion, most of us daylily lovers! We
are addicted to the newest introductions from our favorite hybridizers.
We daub pollen as though we knew
what we were doing. We wait a
couple of years to see the results,
and then, reluctantly, trash almost
all of them. I think we need to take
a closer look at this condition of
ours, and perhaps try for a little
more detached perspective on ourselves. I’ll contribute to that with
whatever little bits and pieces I can
come up with.
I suffer from another compulsion:
the compulsion to count, list, measure, and tally everything in sight.
We will take some peeks inside the
world of data, using our dearly loved
daylilies as the vehicle for our voyage.
Hemerocoholicism
How did we all get wrapped up in
this compulsive addiction to Hemerocallis? I have several theories, none
of them flattering to us who are in
the condition. We are just fortunate
that there is an almost infinite number of varieties out there waiting to
help us deal with our drives to collect ever more types of the daylily.
We delude ourselves that daylilies
are tough and self-sufficient, so that
we are really not increasing the
amount of work we have to do carPage18 Spring/Summer2000
ing for our plants even if we do order 30 or 50 new plants. If you
choose carefully, not a single plant
among those 50 new cultivars will
be tough, let alone self-sufficient in
our climate zones. The only self-sufficient daylily I ever saw was
Hemerocallis fulva ‘Europa’, which
can survive abandoned by the roadsides for a century or more.
We convince ourselves that those
new pinkish mauve flowers with the
swollen, wrinkled edges of yellow
are each unique and are all different and significantly better than the
ones of similar appearance, but who
are named differently from those we
planted a year ago. Even worse,
some of us actually manage to believe that the wretched things are
beautiful.
W
ith the invaluable assistance of fellow members
of the Daylily E-mail Robin and
of AHS generally, we are going
to build a set of observations on
foliage that will help to settle
the question – at least for the
cultivars covered thoroughly
enough in our surveys.
You should help us out
on this.
We love beauty, we search for beautiful flowers, we crave the unique,
the novel, the new. We spend ridiculous amounts of money for new
introductions with the weak rationalization that we will make all that
money back when we sell the future
divisions of these expensive weeds.
We vilify our friends and colleagues
who dare to suggest that an occasional variety of these plants is less
than totally hardy, less than totally
desirable.
The worst of us, typified by myself,
make lists of the names of these
things. The longer the list, the better we feel about it. In fact, the better we feel about the whole world.
It’s really rather sad.
Counting Everything in Sight
I am in favor of counting and measuring everything not moving too
fast to get a good look at.
Let’s start with buds. Melanie Mason has suggested that bud counts
on Florida plants decrease by 5 buds
for every climate zone farther north
in which we try to grow them. I
think I may have suggested to
Melanie that the bud count declines
as an exponential function rather
than a linear one, but Melanie’s hypothesis has priority of date. I wish
we could say the converse was true
of northern daylilies as you move
them south. It’s too bad we can’t
make that measurement too.
However, we can certainly count the
buds on our scapes. We don’t even
have to count the buds on every
scape nor on every variety we grow.
Let’s just count the buds on the varieties that interest us the most.
Join in and help us see if Melanie
is on the right track!
I am also dedicated to determining
foliage habits for as many daylily
cultivars as I can get our fellow enthusiasts to study. The hybridizers are generally pretty close on to
the true condition, in my opinion.
However, that is just my opinion; it
is not a scientifically verified fact.
With the invaluable assistance of
fellow members of the Daylily Email Robin and of AHS generally,
we are going to build a set of observations on foliage that will help
to settle the question–at least for the
cultivars covered thoroughly enough
in our surveys. You should help us
out on this.
(continued on page 17)
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Iconoclast’s Corner
Continued from page 16)
There are daylily people who are really seriously interested in extending the bloom season. Yes, we know
that BITSY blooms really early in the Spring. We also
realize that odds and ends of rebloom appear late in
the season, like scattered pennants of a defeated army
strewn across the battlefield of our garden. But some
of us are hard-core season extenders! I want to see
some color besides yellow in my Extra Early daylily
bed. I want to see fresh, full scapes bursting into bloom
in August, not some ragtag crew of stragglers putting
up one last gasp.
We need to identify daylilies that truly flower in the
EE season, and we need to identify the true VLa flowering varieties.
To do this and to further this notion of extended bloom
season, we conduct a survey of bloom times each season. We record the date on which the first flower of a
variety was open in our garden, the FFO date. Sometimes we even record the date on which the last flower
of the variety was open, the LFO date; this is a much
harder thing to do.
Each of these surveys results in data contributed by
participants; I combine the various individual data sets
into one and merge it with the existing database for
each survey. Then a new release is prepared and announced, and we can distribute the new data – with
the old – to interested members of the AHS.
I see that I have been on my best behavior this time. If
there is a next time, I may vent a little spleen.
These are my opinions. You probably have opinions of
your own, but if not, you are welcome to borrow mine.
Jim Shields
Editor's note: For more information about downloading
the database, contact Jim at [email protected]
Do you know that there is a ("snail-mail")
Species/Scientif
ic R
obin? If you are interested in
Species/Scientific
Robin
joining, contact:
John Schabell, Leader
59 Gifford Court
Mundelein, IL 60060-3018
And for those interested in joining the E-mail A B
ic R
obin
Scientific
Robin
obin, contact co-leaders:
Stout Scientif
Jim Shields at [email protected]
or
Jim Brennan at [email protected]
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
19
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium – Year 2000
Cleveland, Ohio
On behalf of Region 2, I wish to extend appreciation for a job well done to Curt Hanson, host of our 8th annual
AHS Region 2 Symposium, March 3-5 in Cleveland, Ohio. Curt provided us with a great lineup of speakers
whose subjects were varied. Dwight Alsbach, curator of slides and noise makers, provided the entertainment
enjoyed by all, and Registrar Juli Hyatt was the glue that binds an event together. Plans are already being
formulated by Curt for Symposium 2001 (the true millennium). The following is a recap of events, and we
certainly hope this inspires you to make plans to set next year’s date aside and attend. Thank you Curt, Juli,
Dwight, and all who attended this informative, uplifting, fun-filled event.
Mary Milanowski
A Presentation b
evin V
aughn
byy Dr
Dr.. K
Ke
Vaughn
It’s A Small W
orld Af
World
Aftter All…..
Breeding Miniatures
D
by Greg McMullen, Indiana
r. Kevin Vaughn informed the Region 2 crowd
that growing daylilies in the Mississippi delta
was easy, since all of us Midwesterners sent
our best soil to the delta for the cultivation of plants.
Originally from New England, Kevin has been interested in miniature daylilies for quite some time, and
has developed a lot of his ideas and techniques about
daylily hybridization from his work with food crops for
the USDA. The three main characteristics that Kevin
finds appealing in a miniature daylily are:
1.) density of blossoms, 2.) compact flowering, and 3.)
the “look of a bouquet,” which are all related to the
propensity of miniature daylilies to gain clump strength
rather quickly.
Dr. Vaughn has developed both miniature diploids and
tetraploids, with the most promising diploids being
converted by Kevin for use in his tetraploid programs.
In the round diploids, Kevin showed seedlings from
his many different lines of breeding that were developed from his introductions such as BEAT THE BUG,
a 3 ½ " bright yellow with a red eyezone (1996; BEAT
THE BARONS X SILOAM DOODLEBUG); SEE MY
ETCHINGS, a 3 ½ " cream with a blue-violet eyezone,
ala Elizabeth Salter (1996; SILOAM BO PEEP X
WITCHING HOUR); and DELTA BELLE, a 4" clear
pink (1996; TRUE HEART X SILOAM APPLE BLOSSOM). One kid in the blue-violet eyezone program, D115-1, which is out of (EXOTIC KISS X (SUMMER
ECHOES X SILOAM TINY TIM) has a very prominent spiky “blue eyezone” on a white petal. It appears
as if the eyezone has been pulled with a thin painter’s
brush up onto the petals at 1/8" intervals around the
Page20 Spring/Summer2000
Dr. Kevin
Vaughn
holding the
AHS
Publication:
Some Basic
Hemerocallis Genetics
by J. Norton.
petal. Another plant, FAIRY BALLET, which is from
the DELTA BELLE line, is one of the tiniest plants
that Kevin has produced to date, with a 12" scape and
2 ½" diameter blossoms. Most of these lines owe a debt
of gratitude to Pauline Henry, who has paved the road
for many of Kevin’s successes.
Kevin is also exploring miniatures with prominent edges
and no eyes, from crosses involving plants such as BEAUTIFUL EDGINGS (Copenhaver 1989) and RAINING
VIOLETS (Wild 1983), with some successes such as an
unnamed seedling that was yellow with a pink edge.
Kevin also spends time daubing with miniature doubles,
which are also called “popcorn doubles”. These seedlings have been developed from such notable award winners such as SILOAM DOUBLE CLASSIC (Henry 1985)
and JANICE BROWN (EC Brown 1986) crossed with
lesser known plants such as BUBBLY (Joiner 1986) and
(continued on page 19)
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000
It’s A Small W
orld Af
World
Aftter All…Breeding Miniatures (cont.)
CUTE THING (Joiner 1994), as well as some of his
own seedlings. Kevin showed a wonderful diversity of
progeny from the cross of (BUBBLY X SILOAM
DOUBLE CLASSIC), each of which was very special
and appealing to the eye.
On the more recent tetraploid end of the spectrum,
one of the critical issues that Kevin has been struggling with is the tendency of so many tetraploids to
have very strong and erect (straight) scapes. Kevin
believes that a more relaxed scape is more desirable,
which is consistent with the desire to have the clumps
have the look of a bouquet as mentioned earlier. Kevin
has converted plants such as PENNY’S WORTH (Hager
1987) to add its unique size to his miniature tetraploid
(continued)
A Presentation b
byy Bill Hendrix
of Klyn Nur
series
Nurseries
Beyond Daylilies...Creating Seasonal
Interest in the Garden
by Martha Seaman, Ohio
One of the most enjoyable lectures at the Region 2 Symposium was given by Bill Hendrix, of Klyn Nurseries,
who suggested many interesting, mostly new plants to
enhance our gardens throughout the year.
Dr. Vaughn thanked Midwesterners for
sending all their top soil down the Mississippi
River, saying that it was a pleasure growing
plants in loam instead in the veneer-like top soil
of New England.
(Words recalled by Sharon Fitzpatrick, Ohio)
lines, but has had difficulty with mini’s that were not
always fully recurved as diploids becoming a more “tulip form” as they were converted to tetraploid versions
of themselves.
Kevin has incorporated plants from many sources into
his tetraploid miniature lines, including plants from
Elizabeth Salter (IN THE NAVY, 1993, MARY ETHEL
ANDERSON, 1995, and HOT SECRET, 1996), Grace
Stamile (BROADWAY VALENTINE, 1994), Pat
Stamile (ELEGANT CANDY, 1995), Phil Reilly
(FOOLED ME, 1990), ANGEL’S SMILE (ReckampKlehm, 1985) and the tetraploid conversions of
JANICE BROWN and EXOTIC ECHO. One of the
plants that Kevin has developed has been named EVIL
EYE, which is a funny name for a very bold beautiful
eyed cultivar that has loads of buds. Kevin has also
developed a lot of promising seedlings from ELEGANT
CANDY, an intermediate sized bloom that he describes
as “too big for Grace and too small for Pat.”
Kevin has even developed some miniature tetraploid
doubles, one in particular, that was a beautiful cranberry
color with a white edge that was developed out of a cross
of (DOUBLE TROUBLE X FIRES OF FUJI). Some of
Kevin’s most promising miniature tetraploids are coming out of conversions of his own mini diploids, such as
DELTA BELLE. The kids from tetraploid DELTA
BELLE are expressing a high degree of inheritance from
grandparent SILOAM APPLE BLOSSOM, exhibiting a
very clear and clean pink color. Kevin has had less success from his conversion of tetraploid D-115-1, which was
crossed with Elizabeth Salter’s IN THE NAVY, and produced some lackluster plants. Kevin believes that there
will still be plenty of challenge ahead as he attempts
to refine this line into a more refined and beautiful
counter to the wonderful successes that he had with
the diploid version of this seedling.
Bill Hendrix of Klyn Nurseries giving a
riveting talk with slides to show us how to keep
our daylily gardens interesting year round.
He began with Late Winter to Early Spring, recommending the Spring Witch Hazels (Hamamelis cultivars), yellow- and red-twig Dogwoods (Cornus 'Silver
and Gold'), several varieties of Pussy Willow (Salix
chaenomeloides, or Rabbit's Foot Willow), Lenten Rose
(Heleborus orientalis), and White Forsythia, which is
not Forsythia at all but is Abeliophyllum distichum.
Mr. Hendrix also gave specific pruning advice for some
of the above plants so we can regenerate our aging
plants and persuade them to continue their vigorous
annual bloom.
Mid to Late Spring brings the flowers of Spiraea,
Deutzia, and Weigela. There are exciting new varieties of all these lovely shrubs, specifically Spiraea x c.
'Grefsheim'. He showed slides of Rubidor Weigel, which
has a light green-gold foliage, and ‘Wine and Roses’
Weigela, which has burgundy foliage.
Early to Mid Summer, when our daylilies are in full
continued on page 20
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
21
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
Bill Hendrix of Klyn Nur
series (continued)
Nurseries
bloom, Mr. Hendrix encourages us to complement them
with Butterfly Bush (Buddleia cultivars), many kinds of
Hydrangea cultivars, and new varieties of Spiraea which,
with proper deadheading and pruning, give a long season of bloom. He also gave tips on how to give winter
protection to Hydrangea macrophylla cultivars so blossoms can come from old wood even after severe Midwest
winters (protect at least 2-3 good sets of buds).
In Mid to Late Summer, just after the daylilies have
finished in our northern garden, Bill suggested adding
garden color with pretty blue Caryopteris 'Dark Knight'
for example. He suggested using Yellow Senna (Cassia
hebecarpa), Giant Hibiscus (Hibiscus moscheutos cvs.)
for moist spots,Yellow Waxbells (Kirengeshoma
palmata), Rodgersia, Gibralter Bushclover (Lepediza
'Gibralter'), and the (new to this country) Seven Son
Flower (Heptacodium miconioides) which can be a woody
shrub or a small tree.
He reminded us about the dramatic effects of grasses in
our landscapes during this late summer period. There
are many exciting varieties of Miscanthus, Pennisetum,
Panicum, and lots of others to round out the main garden season.
In the Fall to Winter time, most of us think the garden is finished. Bill Hendrix suggested, however, that
we could continue to have color with the flowers of Japanese Anemone and the spectacular berries of Japanese
Beautyberry (Callicarpa dichotoma), and the deciduous,
cold hardy Winterberry Red (also known as Michigan
Holly), and Winterberry Gold (Ilex verticillata hybrids),
some of which hold their fruit until November.
Oscie Whatle
y’s R
ef
lections
Whatley’s
Ref
eflections
Hardy Contributions fr
om a Missouri Hybridizer
from
by Gerda Brooker, Ohio
Wow, what a time we had at Symposium 2000 in Cleveland, Ohio. One of the best meetings I had been to in a
while, and I like them all. Our regional editor asked
me to recap Oscie Whatley’s talk and to interview him
at the same time. What a fine gentleman he is, and as
I already knew, full of knowledge of a lot of things, but
very much involved with his big passion: daylilies.
His passion began about fifty years ago in his aunt’s
Oscie
Whatley, a
hybridizer
much
revered by
all.
As the garden finishes for the year, probably the last bloom
will be on the Common Witch Hazel (Hamamelis virginiana),
which brightens the early winter with unusual form and
twisty, ribbonlike flowers.
Then, we can start all over again in late winter with the
Spring Witch Hazels!
Thank
You!
A big Thank You from your Region 2 Newsletter editor.
Again, so many of you volunteered
to write up the wonderful Symposium presentations.
Yours is the special dedication I
have found so admirable in daylily lovers.
Gisela
Symposium photo credits: Ed Myers and Gisela Meckstroth
garden, who trained a very young Oscie in selecting,
and hybridizing, etc. Oscie started really getting into
the act big time about 35 years ago, and was hooked.
By watching George and Jane Pettus, he became interested in conversions and–as we know–has done some
wonderful work in converting diploids to tetraploids.
Malcolm and I do grow a number of his converted material in our garden.
As a hybridizer, Oscie works with more than daylilies.
He also hybridizes trees, like the dogwood, and various other plants. He tells however, that 98% of the
time he works with daylilies. Good for him, and good
for us.
As he began to speak, one knew whatever he had to
continued next page
Page22 Spring/Summer2000
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
Oscie Whatle
y’s R
ef
lections (continued)
Whatley’s
Ref
eflections
say was worth listening to. Oscie, who believes in hardy
and disease resistant cultivars more than in just “pretty
faces,” stressed the point that we can achieve those attributes, i.e. carefree cultivars, by “hybridizing ourselves
out of the problem of weakness, disease, etc.”
Years ago no one worried about crown rot, spring sickness, various kinds of foliage disease, insects etc., but
with the improvements of flowers, which according to
his words, have gone to astronomical levels, the plants
themselves–other than the scapes–have become
weaker. We no longer have carefree plants. According
to Oscie “the spray-gun has become our weapon of
choice; however, we are loosing the war.” He contents
Oscie, who believes in hardy and disease
resistant cultivars more than just “pretty
faces,” stressed the point that we can
achieve those attributes, i.e. carefree cultivars, by hybridizing ourselves out of the
problem of weakness, disease, etc.
that fruit and tomato growers have done well, and they
do market disease resistant produce. We, as daylily
growers, cannot claim the same as yet.
Solutions? Mr. Whatley suggested, picking the right
kind of parents, right kind of seedlings, and the right
kind of introductions, in order to gain some ground in
the direction of resistance to pests and other ailments.
Oscie admonishes us as growers to challenge our plant,
so to speak, by putting them under normal conditions
in normal soil in disease infested areas, and, if our little
darlings do not catch anything, they may then be resistant to bad stuff. Do you suppose we could raise our
kids that way? Just a thought.
see myself heading for Steve Moldovan’s and Roy
Woodhall’s garden to get some bamboo. They have so
much of it, that China needs to get in touch with them.)
Anyhow, Oscie told us that he never saw scape-blasting in any diploid daylilies; it is peculiar only to tetraploids, and only to those which have really thick scapes.
The spindly, skinny scapes do not blast apart.
Oscie showed some wonderful slides of the cultivars
of the various hybridizers around his area. Some of
them may not be very well-known, but their efforts
were rather lovely. I liked some of the doubles of a
hybridizer by the name of Frank Kropf. Bob Scott had
some wonderful cultivars, and so did Brian Mahieu.
That’s what I was referring to when I said that Oscie
is a true gentleman. He felt it worthwhile to bring some
slides of hybridizers he admired, and rightfully so.
Oscie volunteered his age to me, and I was amazed
what a young “oldie” he is. By his own admission, he
likes big flowers which do not need to be prompted but
which grow without much fuss where they are planted.
A gentlemen he is, and a very humble one indeed. He
was very concerned that some of those less-known hybridizers had a chance to have their efforts displayed
at a meeting such as ours, where lots of collectors and
hybridizers attend. I appreciated him for that, as well
as for his knowledge of the daylily mysteries, which
he will share freely with anyone when asked.
Thank you, Oscie Whatley,
for your time, and effort.
Even though Oscie admits that he does not always
practice what he preaches, he tries. None of us could
do all the “right” things 100% of the time.
During a break in the presentation, Oscie answered
questions. Someone asked how he felt about scape-blasting (I thought she was talking about cussing a cultivar,
you know, like “blast that scape”). Boy, was I wrong!
There are actually scapes which will blast apart. His
reply was that scape blasting was about as unwanted
in his garden as a bad relative at a family reunion. If it
happens, and you must hybridize on the bloom which
sits on top of that blasted scape, you can save the bloom
for this purpose by taping a splint made of bamboo to
keep the top part of the blasted scape alive (I can just
Gerda Brooker and Juli Hyatt listing to
Oscie Whatley’s reflections.
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
23
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
A Presentation b
ath
byy K
Kath
athyy Guest
Be
olding:
Beyyond Napkin FFolding:
Star
ting and Maintaining a Da
ylily Club
tarting
Daylily
by Paul Limmer, New York,
and Dr. Joann Stewart, Georgia
Kathy Guest is a member of BADS (the Buffalo Area
Daylily Society). Her title wouldn’t lead you to believe
that you were going to be given a fishing lesson, but
her “modus operandi” advice was aimed toward reeling in fairly wary game: potential daylily club members, and making them happy about it!
While some potential members would eagerly join a
club, Kathy pointed out that, in most cases, potential
members simply don’t realize the advantages of membership in a plant-specific group; so, it’s necessary to
hook them before you can reel.....................
Why A Daylily Club
She outlined the club membership advantages, which
Daylily clubs are flower clubs, and
flower clubs should be fun and
should not be taken so seriously that
they become life-consuming.
Kathy Guest
can be pointed out to prospective members: (1) camaraderie with a common interest group, (2) tapping into
the common pool of knowledge among members and
increasing knowledge collectively, (3) increasing the
quality of plant material in your area (something
achieved better collectively than on your own), and (4)
the simple “good green fun” of being with other plant
people.
Where to Start
Her best advice about where to start was recognizing
that you can do it. A single person may make the
decisions, pick a date, enlist the aid of friends or members of other “green organizations,” contact the RVP
and nearest clubs for support. She advised that simplicity is the key to obtaining newcomer interest, and
that showing slides is preferable to holding cut scape
exhibits in the early stages, because slides may be interwoven into almost any presentation.
I have a Barn, Let’s Have a Show–Think GREEN
Locations for slide presentations might be found
through other “green organizations,” such as specific
botanical clubs in the area, but any site with capacities for 30-60 might be considered. In order of preference were locations of other “green groups,” civic
groups, and cooperative extension sites. Less desirable
Page24 Spring/Summer2000
“Kathy held
the audience
in the palm
of her hand
without the
aid of
gorgeous
slides of
eyezones,
edges, colors,
forms, and
incredible
advances in
daylilies.”
but also possible for meetings were the sites such as
zoos. Last, but not outside acceptability were schools
and library facilities.
Baiting the Hook
Kathy’s advice about attracting visitors for the purpose of forming a club was not dissimilar to advice
about catching fish. Baiting the hook is the place to
start!
Catchy but simple titles to presentations and confidence-inspiring information/advice messages are essential to bolstering enthusiasm.
Ways to get the word out included using existing “ green
groups” (garden clubs or other plant-specific groups)
as information vehicles, possibly including mass mailings from their club membership lists, but also exploring using available media coverage.
Aiming for a 2-week maximum advance publicity time
frame for maximum exposure ensures “freshness” appeal to the prospective attendee. Press releases, flyers,
and catalogs were all recommended attention grabbers.
She recommended that the meetings have a small charge,
to ensure that participants would feel they were to receive value for money and that they were not simply
attending a free (and, therefore, worthless) presentation.
Goin’ Fishin’
Before the first meeting, make sure you have these in place:
♦Keeping money on hand to make change for bills and
coins (for entrance fees)
♦Items for door prizes and raffles, raffle tickets
♦Handouts
♦Designated “shmoozers” to welcome visitors in a friendly
way and to smooth the awkwardness of “first visits.”
(continued on next page)
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
Be
olding with K
ath
Beyyond Napkin FFolding
Kath
athyy Guest (continued)
The presentation should be short but interesting. Food, handouts, refreshments, etc., should be made available, and the
initial approach to forming a club should be made.
Pedal to the Metal
♦Staying in the public eye is essential for maintaining
a new club and to ensure the success of an existing
club.
♦There should be a constant flow of information/stimulus: flower
and garden shows, exhibits, talks–all coordinated with media
attention and lots of publicity.
♦Partnering with other “green” groups at their sales is
one excellent way to achieve a larger labor pool for
both groups, and an “interest spin-off bonus” for attendees.
Tricks and Gimmicks–Mix it Up
Once the club is formed, members should always feel they are
receiving value for the expenditure of membership. Learning
about conversions, color design, receiving flyers, newsletters,
or ANYTHING about daylily culture and tips helps achieve
this. Kathy recognized that daylily enthusiasts are gardeners,
not just hem nuts, and she recommended alternating daylily
presentations with other types of speakers. Photographic techniques, weather analysis, insect recognition and remedy were
suggested topics of general interest to most gardeners.
People–Recognizing Talent
Realistically, only about one-third of members who join become active, productive members of a group (aka Walek’s
Rule of Thirds). Getting that one-third to join IN becomes
easier if they are not expected to volunteer (they won’t) but
are asked for help with simple tasks and given specific duties. RECOGNITION of tasks done, and done well, is reinforced not just by verbal thank you in Kathy’s club, but it is
also done by giving BADS Bux (a club-specific daylily currency). These Bux are issued as Thank You Daylily Dollars earned/given for services rendered to the club.
While it’s always a nice thing to give recognition for things,
this takes appreciation a step further. BADS Bux are
awarded for:
Bob Sc
hw
ar
Schw
hwar
arzz Presents
Dancing on Air – Unusual FForms
orms
by Dr. Bill Powell, Wisconsin
Notable in this presentation was the speaker’s sense
of humor–a good laugh is good for the soul. Bob talked
about how he’d purchased his house in 1971 and how
he had taken his cow to town to trade for food, but
how, along the way, he had met a large man who offered to trade him shiny black seeds for the cow...so he
had taken them home and had planted them and how
a bright garden full of blossoms had grown overnight!
(A slide of his garden in full bloom and at its very best
image emphasized Bob’s punch line.) Though I’ve been
told that I don’t know Jack of Jack and the Beanstalk,
I can now at least say that I know Bob and his version
of the beanstalk tale.
He illustrated the growth of his garden with slides,
and he showed two special semi-dormants (a slide of
Mimi and of himself illustrating the term “semi-dormant” in human beings!).
Bob made the point that the term “spider” should be
reserved for flowers that are spiders; that is, cultivars
that have petal ratios of 4:1 or better, and that the
general use of the word “spider” to characterize Unusual Forms is confusing and incorrect (like calling
WEDDING BAND a double). He said that the word
“exotic” is used by a lot of folks to describe “Unusual
Forms,” and that this is perfectly permissible.
Bob followed this with a good and informative presentation about properly measuring petals to determine
whether or not a cultivar or seedling is sufficiently narrow to meet the 4:1 ratio for being classified as a spider variant or the 5:1 ratio for being a true spider.
Relying upon slides of different cultivars, he amply illustrated the various Unusual forms that daylilies can take
such as Spatulate, Cascade, and Crispate–pinched, twisted,
(continued on page 39)
♦attendance at meetings.
♦baking cookies for meetings.
♦helping with sales, or any non-officer function
which members perform.
At plant sales and auctions, BADS members may use
their collected Bux to defray the dollar amount of purchases.
This is a Flower Club–And Flowers are Fun!
Kathy ended her presentation with another food for
thought tidbit. Daylily clubs are flower clubs, and
flower clubs should be fun (and not taken so seriously
that they become life-consuming). With that in mind,
a newly formed club should not just be born, but it
should live long and it should prosper.
Kathy held the audience in the palm of her hand without the aid of gorgeous slides of eyezones, edges, colors, forms, and incredible advances in daylilies.
A truly remarkable accomplishment.
Bob Schwarz “danced on air” for us with
unusual daylily forms.
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
25
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000
INTER
VIEW WITH D
AVID AND MORT
INTERVIEW
DA
AP
anel
Discussion:
Panel
by Sharon Fitzpatrick
The Hist
or
ylily
Histor
oryy of the Da
Daylily
Panel Member
Memberss:
er
vid Kirchhof
f,
Elizabe
th Salt
er
Elizabeth
Salter
er,, Jef
Jefff Salt
Salter
er,, Da
David
Kirchhoff,
St
eve Moldo
Ste
Moldovvan, and Oscie Whatle
Whatleyy
Moder
at
or
Moderat
ator
or:: Cur
Curtt Hanson
by Don Jerabek
Who knows what to expect when five prominent hybridizers share the stage and are given the chance to
answer questions on topics from The value of hybridizing with species to declaring the most important daylilies of all time.
The questions to the panels ranged from the concrete
to the most esoteric. The answers ranged from those
that were short and direct to those that were long, complicated, and conceptual. Curt Hanson officiated as the
moderator, sharing questions that had been collected
from the audience. The panelists were hybridizers
Steven Moldovan, David Kirchhoff, Oscie Whatley, Jeff
Salter, and Elizabeth Salter. (All comments below are
not quotes, but are paraphrases by the author of this
article. I apologize for any misunderstandings.)
CH (Curt Hanson):
What affect did Bill Munson have on the development of the modern daylily and/or, what did
you learn from him?
SM (Steve Moldovan):
I learned from Bill to take chances, he frequently
From left to right:
Curt Hanson, Elizabeth Salter, Steve Moldovan,
Oscie Whatley, David Kirchhoff, and Jeff Salter.
Page26 Spring/Summer2000
crossed tender daylilies to hardy daylilies and he tested
his daylilies in the north and in the south. He was
willing to take chances, yet, at the same time he was
dedicated to developing his own distinctive line.
DK (David Kirchhoff):
Bill studied the flowers and the plant; the plant habits
were a major consideration. He was never in a hurry
to sell the next plant in order to make the “next nickel.”
JS (Jeff Salter):
Bill Munson’s biggest contribution was the “plant” more
so than the flower, and the quality of the plant habits
was his primary concern. Bill had a definite vision of
what he wanted to hybridize, and he was not influenced by anyone.
OW (Oscie Whatley):
I was most impressed by Bill’s willingness to explore
uncharted territory with the daylily.
ES (Elizabeth Salter):
As Bill was my uncle, I was able to view his work from
a unique position. He had a broad and diverse breeding program in terms of color, flower size, and bloom
style; he was concerned about the plant habits and not
just the flower.
CH: What cultivars would you recognize as the
biggest breakthroughs, most important cultivars
or your personal favorites?
ES: I think that memorable cultivars have been SATIN
GLASS, SLEEPING BEAUTY and ORVILLE FAY.
ENCHANTED SPELL has had the strongest early impact on my hybridizing efforts.
SM: I think RUFFLED DUDE, which begot BETTY
WARREN WOODS. Also, IDA’S MAGIC and Jeff
Salter’s MY DARLING CLEMENTINE.
OW: PERENNIAL PLEASURE by Doctor Branch. It
was so good I used it as a basis for all of my yellows.
DK: I think that PAPER BUTTERFLY, CHICAGO
TWO BITS and MacMillan’s diploid work, which
showed use what daylilies could become.
JS: Many of Bill Munson’s daylilies including
RUFFLED DUDE and BETTY WARREN WOODS;
also, BITTERSWEET HOLIDAY, which is very dormant, and NILE FLOWER, which had very clear colors.
CH: Specific to the continued advancement of tetraploid daylilies, do you think that it is more important to hybridize with converted material or
continued next page
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000
AP
anel Discussion: The Hist
or
ylily (cont.)
Panel
Histor
oryy of the Da
Daylily
with existing tetraploid daylilies?
OW: I think that using newly converted daylilies will
speed breakthroughs at the tetraploid level. Also, I believe that there is a recent university study that indicates that the majority of breakthroughs come from diploids.
DK: “It’s all in the hands of the Artist.” I’d recommend using tetraploids.
JS: I agreed with David, although one exception would
be to convert Elizabeth Salter’s eyed diploids. We can’t
begin to imagine the future of advancements in tetraploid daylilies.
ES: I agree. That is why I am trying to get my eye
patterns in tetraploid daylilies.
SM: I would convert a few diploids if I had time. There
is a lot of work yet to do with the existing tetraploid
gene pool.
CH: What species daylilies would be good to use
in a hybridizing program?
SM: Perhaps citrina and altissima. I’ve started using
some species.
OW: There is the recent cross of NEW IN TOWN,
which is a cross of H. Citrina x SILOAM RALPH
HENRY. I’ve converted some species, and I am using
them.
CH: The daylily used to be a carefree grower.
Should hybridizers start to concentrate more on
the plant habits and less on the flower?
ES: No, the hybridizer needs to do both. “It’s the whole
package.” One can not concentrate on one, without
the other.
SM: Daylilies are intended to be garden plants, therefore they need to be grown in the garden and selected
in the garden.
DK: Historically, hybridizers focused on the flower and
allowed the selection to based 90% on the beauty of
the flower.
JS: I’m concerned about hybridizers who use herbicides. We need to avoid growing and selecting daylilies in artificial environments. Not many daylilies grow
across a wide area of the country, and maybe we just
need to understand that some daylilies are regional
plants.
CH: There were a lot of controversies in the early
days of converting daylilies. Was it worth it?
ES: “I’ll never forget that a man turned to my Uncle at
the Chicago Daylily Convention and said that
tetraploids were from the snake pits of hell.” Yes, the
daylily has come a long way since the 1960’s.
SM: The diversity and the plant habits of tetraploid
daylilies have surpassed our every expectation. The
present day tetraploids have both more flowers and
more blooms than older daylilies.
OW: The tetraploid colors are much, much richer.
DK: We should be thankful for the continual evolution of the daylily. The advancements have been
greater than we could have imagined just five years
ago.
JS: Diploids are predictable, while tetraploids are
much more unpredictable. It has been worth it!
DanHansenPresents
The Legacy of Ladybug Beautiful and the Dynamic Ne
w
New
Tetraploid Pr
ogram of Dan Hansen
Program
by Dave Winter, Ohio
Dan Hansen opened the Region 2 Symposium 2000
with a moving tribute to his mother, Ra Hansen. He
told of his memories of his mother and of her
passion for daylilies, and how he was her special friend
and partner in daylilies, as well as free labor provider.
After she was gone, he realized how important it is to
(continued next page)
Dan Hansen
of Ladybug
Daylilies
preserving
the daylily
legacy of his
mother Ra
Hansen and
pursuing his
own hybridizing goals.
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
27
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
The Legacy of Ladybug Beautiful and the Dynamic Ne
w
New
Tetraploid Pr
ogram of Dan Hansen (continued from page 25)
Program
have a daylily partner. Dan outlined her many accomplishments in the world of daylilies, particularly winning the Bertrand Farr Hybridizing Award in 1999.
Interestingly enough, many of Ra’s award-winning daylilies did not perform particularly well in her
Florida garden. They were introduced because they had
done so well in gardens of her friends in the North and
who had encouraged her to introduce them. Dan explained that he was going to continue to introduce the
daylilies that Ra had selected and named, and that he
would continue to select and introduce the best of her
remaining seedlings. However, he is not going to continue her breeding program.
We were treated to slides of some of her most successful past introductions and possible future introductions,
including some that–unfortunately–may have been lost
when her garden was moved.
The second half of Dan’s talk was devoted to his own
tetraploid breeding program. One of his primary areas of interest is “daylilies with contrasting borders
but no eyes.” He showed slides of his 1999 introduction ROSES IN SNOW, which was named by Ra, and
also of seedlings with darker petals and lighter edges
having ROSES IN SNOW as a parent. It is a sunfast red
with an ivory border that passes on lighter borders
readily. Dan’s 2000 introduction PINK INTRIGUE and 2001
introduction LONELY HEART are at the center of his hybridizing for seedlings with lighter petals and darker edges.
Most instructive were slides of his recent and future introductions surrounded by those of their first and second generation
offspring, revealing what traits were passed on and highlighted
in breeding. Dan emphasized that tetraploids skip traits some
You bet we had fun at the Region 2 Symposium 2000 in
Cleveland! (Sharon, Dawn, Hiram, Gene, Gail)
Page28 Spring/Summer2000
generations and that to bring out recessive traits, a hybridizer
has to recross the best seedlings. He also showed slides of daylilies with blue eyes and patterned eyes out of a tetraploid conversion of his mother’s introduction BEN LEE (1994). Other
breeding lines that Dan displayed with slides were those for
narrow petals, teeth, whites, and edges and eyes.
Many of them drew oohs and ahs from the audience. By the
end of the talk it was obvious that Ra has left a tremendous
living legacy, both in her own introductions and in Dan and
his hybridizing program.
A Second Presentation b
evin V
aughn
byy Dr
Dr.. K
Ke
Vaughn
Gene
tics, Intuition, and Saf
e Se
Genetics,
Safe
Sexx
by Dr. Bill Powell, Wisconsin
When I first read the title of this presentation, I expected that Dr. Vaughn would illuminate his subject
matter with something approximating a full frontal
centerfold of a daylily (complete with airbrushing). But,
before we got to the imagined visual delights, he prefaced his remarks by recounting his move to the Mississippi delta country and thanked Midwesterners for
sending their topsoil south to the folks down there (see,
in a sense, he’s really hybridizing and growing in Regions 1 and 2 after all!).
After further remarks had whetted our appetite, and
with clammy hands and beads of anticipatory perspiration gracing our upper lips, the lights were dimmed
and the slide show began. What followed were slides
of his work hybridizing small flowered cultivars–and
(continued next page)
Dr. Vaughn reviewing the basics of Mendel’s law.
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
Gene
tics, Intuition, and Saf
e Se
Genetics,
Safe
Sexx (continued)
quite interesting work it is. Toward the end of the slide
presentation he spoke briefly of his work with goose
grass and why it became resistant to some herbicides
and how this led him to try (successfully) treating
sprouted daylily seeds with Surflan and Treflan to induce tetraploidy. Unfortunately, that segment of the
presentation was not long enough to have a learned
discussion about how to keep treated seedlings from
dying from rot or from their failure to have
re-initiated root growth. Ah well, another time and
another place!
Following his slides, he reviewed the basics of Mendelian inheritance and drew the requisite boxes to illustrate both tetraploids and diploids for representing the
distribution of dominant and recessive genes for a given
trait. That was well presented and was more understandable than it commonly is. He suggested that cultivars with melon coloration are good to use with other
cultivars when you want to retain their color (Brother
Charles is probably saying ‘Hallelujah’ to that!).
More esoteric discussion of exceptions to Mendel’s
rules–like genes that can get turned on and off and
how that affects traits–couldn’t be explored due to time
constraints (hey, what all can you do in 1/2 hour?).
Dr. Vaughn also talked about the frustration of having homely little critters (seedlings) grow from the most
hopeful and colorful of dreams and, I think, most of
the audience commiserated with that.
John Rice Presents
People in Glass Houses
by Ric Adams, Michigan
John Rice has had a long, interesting journey lead him
to his current home in Paris, Kentucky. He has been
growing daylilies for 25 years, and he has worked as
an estate gardener for many of those same years. For
the last 15 years, he has managed landscape operations for some of the largest horse farms in Kentucky.
His experience with plants and the drive to build a
major hybridizing program led him to develop a daylily-friendly greenhouse operation.
One of the biggest advantages of operating a greenhouse here in the North is extending the growing season. John explained that by growing indoors, he could
bloom seedlings in 1 year instead of the normal 3 in
our climate. This benefit has helped keep his hybridizing goals on track and closer to the cutting edge.
John has seen better increase in his plants–especially
the evergreens–by growing them indoors. He has been
able to hybridize during cooler weather, thus getting
much better seed set, especially with his tetraploids.
The bonus of working with hems during the, often, dismal late winter months is a wonderful antidote for
those “winter blahs.”
All in all, he was an interesting and entertaining presenter. And now, I’m intuitively relieved that I didn’t
have to type this summary of his remarks about ‘safe
sex’ wearing latex gloves.
John holds the disadvantages to be mostly financial.
Cost of construction (at near $10.00 per square foot)
and the ever-present utility bills for fuel, electric, and
water are serious feasibility questions. Vacations are
often waylaid, as one must tend the greenhouse daily.
The large group looking, listening,
and taking notes.
John Rice who is one of the
People in Glass Houses!
(continued next page)
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
29
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
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Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
People in Glass Houses (continued from page 27)
That type of commitment, combined with outdoor gardening, means there is often no break in seasonal activities.
If your choice is to put up a structure–be it metal, wood,
glass, poly, or any combination–site choice is most
important.You want to maximize your sun exposure in
the winter while, hopefully, finding some shade for the
hot summers. Avoiding windy sites, and finding a level
area with good interior and exterior drainage, all figure
into the ideal location.The depths of your pocketbook may
define your structure materials, but those who are handy
and creative can find something to fit their budget.
Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
George Doorakian Presents
Nor
thern Gr
own Da
ylilies
Northern
Gro
Daylilies
and Gr
owing Da
ylilies Hydr
oponically
Gro
Daylilies
Hydroponically
by Sharon Fitzpatrick, Ohio
George Doorakian referred to himself as "the new kid on the
block" in the world of daylilies. For the past thirty-some years,
he had spent his life as an organic chemist and noted rosarian. Finding that many cultivars of roses had become annuals in his area, he hybridized roses in shades of pink, lavender and red that could withstand -30 F degree temperatures.
Faced with a major health problem, he was informed that
he needed heart bypass surgery. His cardiologist told him it
was time to retire and slow down. Mr. Doorakian survived
his bypass surgery, donated his rose collection to The New
England Rose Society and increased his daylily collection.
He is still evaluating about 200 rose seedlings, though.
He suggested treating seeds with dilute hydrogen peroxide
solution (1 cc of 30% hydrogen peroxide/1 liter of distilled
water) for 12 hrs followed by planting the seed in Oasis
wedges and watering them when needed with the same peroxide solution to improve the rate and percent of germination as well as greatly reducing damping off. This process of
seed treatment had always worked for him with roses, so,
why not try it on daylilies?
Under greenhouse conditions, his daylily seeds are planted
in horticulture Oasis wedges and grown in covered trays kept
at 75 F degrees. After about 6 weeks, daylily seedlings with
their Oasis wedges are planted into a suitable planting mix
in a 4" square pot with the minimum air temperature being
kept at least 70 F. In mid-May, the large daylily seedlings
are transplanted to an outside raised bed with a manifold
watering/fertilizing system. Seven to 9 months after seed
germination the first bloom will be seen. If the bloom is
equivalent to the state-of-the-art, it will remain outdoors
for the winter. If the bloom is a Eureka! with a new color or
pattern, it will be repotted (10" pot) and brought back into
the greenhouse for more scrutiny for the winter.
When MY DARLING CLEMENTINE entered his life, he
Looking past the external covering, popular options
often include a ventilation system, a heat system, a
supplemental lighting system, supplemental CO2, and
a backup power supply. Other considerations will include a watering system, a pest control procedure, and
a soil-potting work area.
After putting together all the puzzle pieces, John
showed us slides of his greenhouse full of daylily bloom.
He showed us that, with proper planning and hard
work, anyone could reach that Pot of Gold defined by
off-season blooms here in the North.
Page30 Spring/Summer2000
George Doorakian, the “new kid
on the daylily block”?
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
knew this must be the perfect daylily. The plant had a beautiful flower, was well-branched, and had a strong reblooming
tendency. The only problem was that it was not hardy in his
area. This plant was the beginning of The Doorakian Dance.
He showed a slide of a pyramid of dancers which depicted
hybridizers who came before him. He stated that he and the
Almighty were in there somewhere, trying to create distinctive cold-tolerant daylilies.
Mr. Doorakian selected a 1994 seedling with good foliage, an
unusual eye pattern, 4-way branching, and 25 buds as a bridge
plant. Many of his friends told him the seedling was small
and relatively ugly. Working with this seedling produced a
diploid daylily with a unique pattern including a green eye
extending over 50% onto the petal that he registered as MALACHITE PRISM (MP) and will introduce in 2001. Before releasing MALACHITE PRISM or its tetraploid conversion to
the public, he had to see what it's children looked like. The
MALACHITE PRISM offspring, all possessed the same unique
large green throat pattern. The kids from the tet form of
MP will bloom during late summer of 2000.
Mr. Doorakian has come up with another seedling,
STARGATE, with a radiating green throat which throws
polytepalous blooms 75% of the time. Distinctive 1999 JC
Award winners, DIVINE INSPIRATION (an 8" tet pink spider variant) and NANCY BRITZ (a 5.5" diploid cream with
a radiating green throat) were also illustrated. He displayed
future intros of seedlings–QUEEN KATHLEEN, 9" diploid
creamy white spider variant with a large radiating green
throat, CONNIE ABEL, a 6" tet orange sherbet self with a
very distinctive ruffled, knobby edge which is the result of
the cross of PARTY QUEEN X MARY COLLIER FISHER
(YUMA x ANGEL'S SMILE). He attributes his edged seedlings to MARY COLLIER FISHER. Spiders and spider variants of purple and red have been produced from QUEEN
KATHLEEN. His future introduction, 5" tet PHIL REILLY,
a pink stippled over purple with a ruffled gold edge and green
throat (not out of IDA'S MAGIC or related cultivars) is hardy
Sharon
Fitzpatrick
of Canal
Winchester,
Ohio,
taping
presentations at the
Region 2
Symposium
2000 in
Cleveland.
(with
permission,
of course.)
"We are in the new Millennium. Old rules do
not apply. We are what we think we are. Reinvent
yourself. Learn to dance. Embrace new heights.
Explore new territory. Mentor someone young or
old. Do what you love." (George Doorakian)
to Zone 5 and gives hardy gold edge offspring. One of his hardy
yellow seedlings with large ruffling from SANDRA ELIZABETH and MY DARLING CLEMENTINE blooms from July
to frost and is at clump strength after three winters.
Another interesting slide was of an eyed cultivar with gold
pixy dust stippling in the eyezone. Gold stippling resulted
from his treating daylily seeds with gamma-radiation.
Faced with the problem of how to increase new cultivars for
marketing, Mr. Doorakian began to explore the possibilities
of hydroponics. He showed slides of "what looked to me like"
sections of white 6" x 5' plastic water pipes/tubes with watertight caps on each end. Water intake and outlet openings
were at the top and bottom of each endpipe. Pipes were
mounted three across on a saw horse type bench. Holes (3")
were drilled at equal intervals on the top face of each pipe.
The drain section of each 5' pipe was placed on the top of a
26 gallon holding tank which contained a nutrient/water
solution. Plastic tubing (3/8") was inserted into the nutrient
tank and run through the 5' pipe system. A small hole in
the tubing is located at each plant opening supplying continual misting of nutrients to plants via recirculating pump
in the holding tank. An aquarium aerator was inserted in
the tank to help keep the water solution constantly oxygenated–a must for hydroponics with daylilies to be successful.
Six week old Oasis cube seedlings were placed into 3" diameter plastic mesh holding cups which then were placed into
the 3" holes along the 5' pipe sections. By modifying the
nutrient solution from lawn fertilizer, to balanced fertilizer,
and finally to a high phosphorus fertilizer, excellent plant
development was observed as well as bloom in the 7-9 month
period keeping the oxygenated nutrient solution at 75 F at
all times with air temperature fluctuating between 45-80 F.
After seeing the excellent growth results from these Oasis
cube seedlings, he knew he was on to something.
Next, early-stage tissue-cultured (TC) plants, provided by
Jamie Gossard (of Superior Laboratories), were placed in
the mesh containers, and inserted into the 3" openings of
the tubes. After 6 weeks of growing these tissue cultures
hydroponically, plants with comparatively massive root systems were produced which were now environmentally
friendly for planting in soilless mix and for growing under
greenhouse conditions, with no plant loss resulting. Without the hydroponic treatment, greater than a 50% loss of
early-stage TC plants would have resulted upon planting
directly in a soilless mix.
When growing with hydroponics, one has to monitor pH, type
of nutrients and their concentration, and temperature to
achieve bloom in 7-9 months. Mr. Doorakian called upon
his organic chemistry background to figure the exact measurements of pH (6.8) and parts per million (200) of nutrient
to water to assure adequate TC growth. Future experiments
(continued on page 44)
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
31
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
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Expected shipping date is 10/15/00...in time for the Holidays!
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Email: [email protected]
DAYLILY CALENDAR – A perfect gift!
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Color Catalog – $2 Refundable – We ship April 1 thru May 15 and August 15 through October 1
Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
Kar
ol Emmeric
h Presents
arol
Emmerich
Career Decisions
by Charlie Ray, Illinois
On Saturday afternoon, Karol took all of us on a most
enjoyable trip through her gardening life. A sequence of
“career decisions” led her to where she stands today, well
along in her third career, hybridizing daylilies.
After college, Karol and her new husband, Dick, were
off to graduate school in California. Their dream at that
time was to retire at 30 in the California Redwoods. After graduate school it was time for the first career decision: Karol joined the Dayton-Hudson Corporation.
In 1973 Karol and Dick bought the home they still live
in. The 3/4 of an acre was partially landscaped with
iris, hosta, phlox and daylilies in railroad tie beds. Dick
and his crew spent many hours over the years replacing the existing beds and building stone terraces and
walls, which Karol planted.
Finally the gardens were complete. Just as Karol and
Dick were getting itchy for a new project, the property
next door went up for sale. A year later they bought
the lot across the street. It was at this point that Karol
discovered that “hems” came in more than two colors,
and she joined AHS.
Karol Emmerich
Page32 Spring/Summer2000
Shortly after this, Karol came to realize that her career at Dayton-Hudson was not providing her with the
satisfaction she was looking for. Time for career decision number two.
(continued next page)
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Symposium 2000 (continued)
Career Decisions (continued)
In May 1993, Karol left Dayton-Hudson to work with
several nonprofit organizations and to create new
gardens on the lot next door. She would create a
series of rooms with all of the perennials, hardy in
Minnesota, displayed and with a major emphasis
on daylilies. She sought to create a refuge that informed and inspired the visitors.
She attended her first National (Orlando) that year
and quickly had a wish list of 1000 cultivars. (Does
this sound familiar to any of you?) Over the next four
years as Dick built walls and pathways, Karol planted
over 1000 daylily cultivars, 325 varieties of hostas and
over 600 other perennials.
The slides Karol showed of her gardens documented a
lushly growing, well designed perennial garden in
of land that will not only accommodate a new greenhouse for Karol, but also the business their son wants
to start. The property has a large house and buildings, which was the site of a stagecoach station in the
1860’s. It has been restored, and has Karol and Dick
thinking of several possibilities. It appears her third
career will be at least as busy as those that preceded
it. And a large piece of land, complete with a gravel pit
is for sale across the street...of the new property!
Look ffor
or these two additional R
egion 2 Symposium
Region
present
ations in the next issue:
presentations
Elizabeth Salter’s From Wimberlyway to Rollingwood
and
John Rice’s Thoroughbred Daylilies
A discussion with Dan Trimmer got
her started, and during the first year she
produced 7000 seeds. She recounted her
various solutions to finding enough
space to plant them all, including showing a slide of my favorite, “The cutting
the driveway in half trick.”
which daylilies had pride of place. Dick’s walls and the
other structures, as well as the trees, provided a tremendous backdrop for Karol’s plantings. As these gardens were finished, as Karol puts it, “as much as a
garden is ever finished,” it was time for a third
career decision.
Karol decided she was interested in hybridizing lavenders
and purples and eyes. She was also interested in naming
daylilies to reflect her religious beliefs. A discussion with
Dan Trimmer got her started, and during the first year she
produced 7000 seeds. She recounted her various solutions
to finding enough space to plant them all, including my favorite, The cutting the driveway in half trick.
Region 2 Symposium 2000: An unqualified Success!
Left to right: Registrar Juli Hyatt, Joan Kepf, Chair Curt
Hanson, RVP Mary Milanowski
While attending MWS in 1997, Karol met Larry Grace.
Larry told Karol that if she was really serious about hybridizing, she could join him in his new
greenhouse venture where he would teach her. Despite
a long list of “why nots,” Karol decided this was the chance
of a lifetime. In the fall of 1997 she took a number of her
plants to Larry’s greenhouse and returned the next
spring to hybridize with them, spending several weeks
away from home. A year ago she saw the first blooms of
those crosses and by the time you read this, she will have
seen her second crop bloom.
Now, Dick and Karol have decided that it’s time for
her to return to Minnesota. They have located a piece
A happy crew from Columbus, Ohio: Gail Johannes,
Becky McMurry, Jim McMurry, Bill Johannes.
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
33
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
American Hemer
ocallis Socie
ty R
egion 2 Summer Mee
ting
Hemerocallis
Society
Region
Meeting
Host
ed b
ylily Socie
ty
Hosted
byy the Chicagoland Da
Daylily
Society
Chicago, Illinois
Best W
est
ern Inn of Burr Ridge
West
estern
Headquar
Headquartter
erss
1, 22, 23 in the Y
ear 2000
July 2
21
Year
YourHostClubislookingforwardtowelcoming
Region2membersthissummer.
Frida
1, 2000
ridayy, July 2
21
9:00 am
12:30 pm
1:00 pm
1:00 pm
3:00 pm
5:00 pm
5:30 pm
6:00 pm
6:30 pm
7:30 pm
Registration
Bargain Plant Table Sales
Open Garden List
Exhibition Refresher Clinic
Exhibition Judges Clinics I
Exhibition Judges Clinic II
Garden Judges Workshop I
Youth Meeting
Reception (cash bar)
Hybridizers Slide Show
Dinner (included in registration fee)
Speaker: Leo Sharp
Daylily Plant Auction following speaker
Saturda
Saturdayy, July 22, 2000
7:00-7:30 am
7:30-7:45 am
12:00 noon
5:00 pm
6:00 pm
7:00 pm
Registration
Breakfast on your own
Buses leave for gardens
Garden Judges Workshop II en route
Lunch en route (included in registration fee)
Return to hotel
Reception (cash bar)
Banquet (included in registration fee)
Region 2 Business Meeting with
Guest Speaker Robert Ellison
Sunda
Sundayy, July 23, 2000
7:30 am
1:30 pm
Buses leave for gardens
Breakfast at The Fields
(included in registration fee)
Return to Hotel
Highlights
& Guest speaker Robert Ellison
& Bargain plant table
& Seven gardens on tour
& Exh. judges clinics, garden judge workshops
& Friday evening slide show & plant auction
Page34 Spring/Summer2000
Registration Inf
ormation
Information
$95.00 ..... perpersonwithJune23postmark
$110.00 .... perpersonafterJune23postmark
$65.00 .......................... YouthRegistration
No
Notte: On Sunday, July 23, we will be visiting The Fields
wherewewillhavebreakfastandtourthegarden;then,
wewillgotoCoburgPlantingFieldsinValparaiso,Indiana.
For those of you who wish to drive on your own to get a
headstartforhomeaftertheconvention,pleasededuct$5
perpersonfromyourregistration. Mapswillbeprovided.
Chec
ks pa
o the Chicagoland DS
Checks
payyable tto
Mailto: RegistrarWilliamSevetson
5217LawnAvenue
WesternSprings,IL60558
ormation contact
For additional inf
information
contact::
PatBell,Chairman
39W582DeerRunDrive
St.Charles,IL60175
Tel:630-377-3705
Meeting/Lodging
Best W
est
ern Inn of Burr Ridge
West
estern
300S.FrontageRoad,BurrRidge,Illinois
Tel:630-325-2900
Fax:630-325-8907
ContactHoteldirectlyforspecialAHSChicagolandDaylily
Societyrate. $73singleordoubleplustaxifreservedby
July1,2000.Pleaserequest1stor2ndflooraccommodations.
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Meet our Region 2 Summer Meeting 2000
Keynote Speaker: Bob Ellison
by Bill Sevetson
Bob grew up on farm in
Caledonia, a few miles
northeast of Rockford, Illinois, and he with his
wife, Patricia, have lived
in Rockford for the last
21 years. His greenhouse
and garden are on almost an acre of land in
southwestern Rockford.
He grew up working
with plants, and he
continues to enjoy it to
this day. His hobbies
include fishing and col-
Robert Ellison
lecting toy tractors.
He began hybridizing “for fun" in 1990 and turned
more serious with the introduction* of ANGELA
RENAE (93), a red tetraploid. To date, he has registered/introduced some 50 diploids and tetraploids. He
grows about 2000 seedlings each year, and he believes
that he doesn't have to grow excessive numbers of
seedlings in order to get good results if he selects the
right parents. Many of his daylily names start with
the word "Prairie" because of his love of the Midwest and, primarily, for north central Illinois prairies.
Bob's goals in hybridizing include developing cultivars that can adapt to all climactic conditions with
emphasis on northern hardiness. He also looks for
heavy substance, good bud count, and lots of ruffles.
He believes that his best introduction to date is
MICHELLE FAGER (97), named after his assistant
in hybridizing and in the greenhouse.
Bob's best tetraploid to date is RED LINE FEVER
(98), a 30" M 5 3/4" dor very ruffled, bright, fire
engine red with a green throat that has 4-way
branching with a bud count of 25.
Two of his Year 2000 registrations, SALMON
PIECRUST, a diploid with a ruffled edge that is piled
high like the crust of a pie, and AIM FOR HEAVEN,
a pink tetraploid with a rose-red eye and a double
rose-red and gold edge, have already sold out.
Bob’s well-known Bloomfest (see Ellison’s advertisement on page 15 for details) runs from the second
through the fourth weeks of July each summer.
To clip out and fill in registration form.
2000 R
egion 2 Summer Mee
ting and Garden TTour
our R
egistration
Region
Meeting
Registration
Name:
AdditionalName(s):
Address:
State:
Numberofpersonsattending
Zip:
Adult:
TakingbusonSunday,July23:
Yes
'
City:
Phone: (
Youth:
No
)
Amountenclosed:$
'
Friday Dinner Entrees: Sliced Pork Tenderloin or Broiled Catfish Saturday Dinner Entrees: Prime Rib or OrangeRoughy
Name&Entree:
Name&Entree:
Name&Entree:
Name&Entree:
No
Notte: If you require special dietary meals, please notify the Registrar.
sonsattendingJudgesClinicsandGardenJudgesWorkshopsinappropriateboxbelow:
Pleasewritenumberofper
persons
'Exhibition
Clinic I
' Exhibition
Clinic II
'Exhibition
RefresherClinic
'GardenJudges
WorkshopI
'GardenJudges
WorkshopII
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
35
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Lombard’s
Red TTe
et Specialist – 30 yyear
ear
earss
William L. Bell
22 W 366 F
ir
st Str
eet
Fir
irst
Street
Glen Ellyn, IL 60137
630-942-9827
(1/2 mile north of St. Charles Road, or 1/2 miles south of
North Avenue; one block east of Glen Ellyn Main Street.)
RED THUNDER
BARON LOMBARD
AUNTIE EUGIE
ALCESTE
Coming:
CISSIE LOMBARD
Garden open during Region 2 Summer Meeting
(not on the bus tour)
July 21-23, 2000
I believe this is the most advanced,
recessive line of Red Tets in the nation.
Visit Lombard’s and see for yourself!
More introductions to come.
2/00
Page36 Spring/Summer2000
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
SLIDE REQUES
EQUESTT
FOR THE YEAR 2000 AHS
REGION 2 SUMMER MEETING
HYBRIDIZERS:
Please share slides of yyour
our new and
future intr
oductions.
introductions.
PLEASE DON
ATE
ONA
AUCTION PLANT
S
LANTS
For the AHS R
egion 2
Region
Summer Mee
ting
Meeting
July 221-23
1-23 in the YYear
ear 2000
Proceeds Support the Region 2
Great Lakes Daylily Newsletter
List cultivar names and hybridizer
ore dinner Friday night, and
The slides will be shown bef
before
we are asking that you send no more than 10 slides to
ensure everyone gets a share of viewing time.
Please send slides no later than July 14 so they may be
included on a printed list.
Mail to:
Bill Potter
208 South LaSalle, Suite 1681
Chicago, IL 60604
Tel: 312-372-2622
(Graphic contributed by: Jill Yost, Pataskala, Ohio.)
Donor
Name :____________________________
Address:__________________________
_________________________________
Hybridizer
Cultivars
_________________________________
_________________________________
_________________________________
_________________________________
_________________________________
Please send this form for compilation by July 1, 2000, to
the 2000 Region 2 Summer Meeting Plant Auction Chair:
Dolores Knowles
320 St. Charles Road
Glen Ellyn, IL 60137
Telephone: 630-469-3922 Fax: 630-469-2280
email:[email protected]
Region 2 RPD Ed Myers and Secretary Virginia
Myers at Symposium
Two (2) preferred methods of plant donation:
1. Send a postcard listing plants to be donated and
shipped lat
er along with hybridizer's name and
later
description, etc. by July 1, 2000.
2. Bring labeled plants to hotel registration table with
cards containing hybridizer's name, description, etc.
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
37
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region2SummerMeetingTourGardens
Once Upon A Millennium–Chicago 2000
Welcome
by Pat Bell
The members of the Chicagoland Daylily Society are looking forward to hosting the AHS Region 2 Meeting in
Chicago during the first July of this new millennium. We are sure you will enjoy visiting the seven area
gardens we have selected for your bus tour. These gardens have great collections of newer daylily cultivars as
well as some of the older “must have" favorites. Some of these gardens are landscaped home gardens and some
are also commercial gardens. Along with these beautiful gardens you will have an opportunity to learn from our
banquet speaker, hybridizer Robert Ellison of Rockford, IL. We feel that, as our logo says, Once Upon a
Millennium, Chicago 2000 has more than you dreamed for daylily growers. Last, but not least, you can enjoy
the companionship of regional and out-of-region daylily friends.
Note: Except as noted, all photo credits for the Region 2 Summer Meeting tour gardens go to Rosemary Balazs of Chicagoland
.
The Fields 2000 Displa
Displayy Garden
Greg Neuman and Diane Hucek
1850 Caton Farm Road, near Weber
Joliet, Illinois
Greg Neuman and Diane Hucek, owners of The Fields
on Caton Farm Road, have carved out a 5-acre garden
from their 200 acre working nursery. This commercial garden hosts approximately 350 varieties of daylilies, and it is designated an official AHS Display Garden.
Large, flowering beds are set in and among exquisite
landscaping features. They include a gazebo, a large
pergola, lakes and fountains. Brick pathways through
several areas of the garden increase accessibility, and
golf carts are also available for visitors.
During the peak bloom season and flower show (approximately June 20 to August 2), The Fields display
cut daylilies beautifully in glass vases in their showroom. Other periods of interest are the spring daffodil
show followed by Siberian iris and peony displays.
The Fields’ garden is open Mondays through Saturdays from 10 am to 4 pm during the peak bloom. The
Fields welcome visitors, and they can easily accommodate large groups of daylily enthusiasts.
Coburg Planting Fields
Phillip Brockington and Howard H. Reeve, Jr.
573 East 600 North
Valparaiso, Indiana 46383-9727
The Fields on Caton Farm
(Photo by Beverly Smutnik)
Page38 Spring/Summer2000
Coburg Planting Fields is a commercial nursery, national display garden, and home of Phil Brockington
and Howard Reeve. Situated on a ten-acre, landscaped
site outside Valparaiso, Indiana, the garden has been
developing over 25 years. Howard and Phil grow approximately one thousand daylily cultivars and a sizable collection of hostas along with other perennials,
trees, and shrubs. Many of the daylilies are in gardens,
but most are in four fields totaling more than an acre.
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Summer Meeting Tour Gardens (continued)
Coburg Planting Fields (continued)
Of special interest is the display garden housing about
150 spiders, variants, and exotics which Howard uses
for hybridizing. For the Region 2 Summer Meeting, a
collection of Curt Hanson’s newer daylilies has been
incorporated into the landscape.
Other features of interest are a field of daylily species,
a small pond with a waterfall and frog collection, some
sculptures, and a setting with old farm buildings. With
luck, a G-gauge model railroad will be running through
one of the gardens during our tour.
because of space limitations for seedlings. They simply enjoy collecting. The Sevetson Garden has been
an AHS Display Garden since 1997.
During the last few years, Bill has upgraded their collection considerably. Although their collection represents cultivars from many hybridizers, their largest
collections are those of Pat Stamile, Curt Hanson,
Oliver Billingslea, and Doc Branch. Dr. Branch believes
they have the biggest collection of his cultivars in the
country, including all of his “Smuggler” series regis-
Phil Brockington and Howard Reeve
Diane and Bill in their Sevetson Daylily Garden
The Se
ylily Garden
Sevvetson Da
Daylily
trations to date. They have guest plants from Bob
Ellison, Leo Sharp, Ottis Houston, Oliver Billingslea,
and Don Albers. Bill Potter and Bill Vaughn have also
provided guest plants of other hybridizers.
Diane and Bill Sevetson
5217 Lawn Ave, Western Springs, IL 60558
Diane and Bill have lived and gardened in Western
Springs for some thirty-four years. They both grew up
in nearby communities and also share a major interest in flowers. Before they caught the daylily bug, they
had as many as 125 varieties of perennials in their
garden. Bill joined the Suburban Men’s Garden Club
in 1977 and was their president in 1981.
Their interest in daylilies began in about 1987, and
they joined the Chicagoland DS and the AHS in 1988.
Bill served as president of Chicagoland for three years
from 1992 through 1994. They have a typical suburban lot, which provides space for over 600 daylily varieties. They like all types of daylilies, especially largeflowered ones and doubles, to which Diane has taken
a particular interest. Diane and Bill do not hybridize
The P
at and Chuc
k Bell Garden
Pat
Chuck
Pat and Chuck Bell
39 W 582 Deer Run Drive, St. Charles, IL 60175
The two-acre country garden of Chuck and Pat Bell
incorporates a wide variety of perennials for both sun
and shade. Daylilies are a prominent feature in the
sunny borders, but perennials, ornamental grasses and
shrubs are used to create interesting views throughout the year.
Pat, an avid plant collector, has designed and planted
areas to incorporate different textures and colors to
enhance the viewing of their 400-plus daylilies. In the
shady part of the garden, numerous varieties of hosta,
ferns, and other shade-loving perennials are featured.
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
39
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Summer Meeting Tour Gardens (continued from page 33 )
The Pat and Chuck Bell Garden (continued)
The large variety of plants ensure that visitors to the
garden will find a different emphasis during the seasons’ changes. One hundred year old Bur Oaks provide a cool retreat area for resting and for enjoying the
changing views as the months progress from spring to
fall.
This garden also contains the large number of Year
2000 Region 2 Englerth Award candidates. It is located in a choice part of the garden with good exposure to the sun. By July, they should be ready to show
us their best features.
Pat Bell in her Garden
The Lar
son Garden
Larson
Joanne and Gaylen Larson
49 Woodland Drive, Barrington, IL 60010
Since 1973, Joanne and Gaylen Larson have lived and
gardened along Flint Creek in Barrington, a northwest
suburb located about 45 miles from the city of Chicago.
Many mature oaks and the creek lend a parklike
atmosphere to the back yard of their two-acre property.
Carol McClintock, Joanne’s daylily mentor, advised her
to plant hybrids to aid in erosion control along the creek
bank. The first 14 plants were purchased at the
Chicagoland Daylily Society’s August sale, and 10 of
those plants are still growing along the creek.
The initial planting performed admirably in partial
shade, and a double row of plants soon stretched along
the creek. The creek-bank planting has been increased
to a triple row, and still there are clumps awaiting a
spot in one of the beds. Plants number over 500 at the
present time, with over 90 hybridizers represented.
Page40 Spring/Summer2000
One of the beds in the front yard contains small- and
miniature-flowered cultivars.
This is not a hybridizer’s garden or a collector’s garden
per se. It is planned, planted, and cared for by an exfarm girl who loves to grow things, especially those
plants that bloom. The Larsons take pride in growing
healthy clumps of hemerocallis that send up a good
number of scapes that bear well-formed, clear blossoms.
Older “tried and true” cultivars are compared with
newer ones. Most of the gardening chores are done by
the Larsons, who do not use chemicals; so, you may
Joanne Larson in the Larson Garden
see thrip damage. The battle with local critters, such
as beaver, woodchuck, muskrat, and deer, is always
an ongoing one.
No plants are marketed from this garden, but plants
are shared with “hem” friends, garden club members,
and they are donated for annual sales held by the local
society.
Visitors are always welcomed every summer in this
AHS Display Garden, especially in July.
The Garden of R
osemar
Rosemar
osemaryy Balazs
Rosemary Balazs
329 N. Oak Street, Hinsdale, IL 60521
Rosemary’s garden is located on a city-size lot in
Hinsdale, but over 500 cultivars have found a home
there. The owner’s love of daylilies has intensified since
she took early retirement eight years ago, and every
year there has been a new project to expand the daylily
garden wherever possible.
Last year, she grouped many of her hemerocallis by
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Summer Meeting Tour Gardens (continued)
The Rosemary Balazs Gardens
Continued from page 34
color in an attempt to harmonize the small garden in
its overall effect. There are also two collections of
flowers hybridized by Brother Reckamp and Leo Sharp.
Both hybridizers emphasize glorious soft colors, and
that is the mainstay of this garden.
Four years ago, the front garden was opened to expand
the flower beds, and about 160 daylilies are now in
this area. On the north side of this garden is also the
gold, orange, and red grouping, enhanced with
numerous perennials. While these colors are not
favorites, grouped together they are probably the most
exciting, electrifying spot in the garden.
The Kirin Garden
Millie and Charlie Kirin
8450 Heather Court, Burr Ridge, IL 60521
Some fifty years ago, when planning their future and
thinking of having their own house, Millie would often
remark, “When we have our house, I’m going to have nothing
but grass and evergreens.” Today, they have their house at
the end of the street in a cul-de-sac on a third of an acre with
over 600 daylilies, some perennials, annuals, and hardly any
evergreens. Charlie wonders what happened.
The daylilies are located in ten raised beds with a collection
of Siloams, Marsh’s Chicago series, Leo Sharp’s Brookwoods,
and Dennis Anderson’s Indy series. There is also a fine
Along the south side of the house, beyond the front
entrance, is a pink grouping of old favorites, and in
the center bed is the main Brookwood collection.
Several guest plants were planted here for the Region
2 Meeting, some of which are the newest cultivars from
Leo Sharp.
Because of the front garden’s proximity to a public
sidewalk, the garden has become an excellent
educational tool to inform the public about hemerocallis
and the daylily organizations. The Chicagoland group
meets at the local Community House in Hinsdale, but
most passersby also learn of Rosemary’s two other
daylily affiliations: The North Shore Iris and Daylily
Society, which meets at the beautiful Chicago Botanic
Garden in Glencoe, and the Prairieland Daylily Society,
which meets in Bradley, Illinois.
This garden became an AHS Display Garden in 1998.
The inspiration to pursue this honor was the hope that
small gardens, by utilizing space to the maximum, can
still provide a proper setting for our favorite flower.
Millie and Charlie in their Garden
collection of doubles, which continues to grow and expand.
The spiders are located just behind the Chicago bed. The
remaining beds include some of the newer varieties as well
as some of the “oldies but goodies.”
On any given day, the garden shed door opens around nine
o’clock and closes about four. The Kirins work their garden
daily. Millie does the planning and buying of daylilies while
Charlie digs the holes and does the landscaping. All of this
work helps make a beautiful blaze of color during blooming
season.
Region 2Symposium200
0/BobSc
hw
ar
2000
Schw
hwar
arzz Presents:
Dancing on Air–Unusual Forms (continued from page 23)
Rosemary Balazs in her Garden
and quilled.
This combination of well-presented oral descriptions of such
forms and a series of corresponding illustrative slides helped
the audience understand better what the various terms
mean. Plus, the cultivars were a good reminder that beauty
is not confined to being round and gold braided any more
than a single color. All in all, this was an excellent presentation that was both informative and a “hoot.”
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
41
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
This and That, fr
om AHS to Regional Topics
from
Garden Judges
Looking Ahead
AHS Region 2 Meetings
By Phyllis Cantini, Regional Garden Judges Liaison
2000:
H
ow many times and how many different ways can
we tell you, Region 2 Needs Garden Judges!
Garden Judges are the people who vote the national cultivar
awards. If you want input into selecting the winners,
you should be a garden judge.
If you attend the AHS National Convention or Region
2 Summer Meeting this summer, try to schedule your
time to take in the Garden Judge Workshops. There
are two workshops required, both easy, both with
knowledgeable instructors. No tests!
How easy is it to be a Garden Judge? Do you visit 5 or
more gardens a year? Can you attend one National or
Regional to qualify? Then, after becoming a garden
judge, can you fit in two Nationals or Regionals over a
5-year period? It’s that easy.
Other than remembering to vote on time each year,
it's a “piece of cake.”
Of course, we do want our judges to be conscientious
in their observing and voting on cultivars, which is
why we ask our members to take the classes to learn
the responsibilities of being a Garden Judge.
I hope I have encouraged some of you to take the Workshops this summer, and I am looking forward to seeing some new faces in the class.
Remember
egion 2 needs more Garden Judges!
emember,, R
Region
Please contact me:
Phyllis Cantini, Region 2 Garden Judge Liaison
3140 Elder Road North
Orchard Lake, MI 48324-2416
Phone: 248-363-2352
Email: [email protected]
Tell Y
our FFriends
riends
Your
to join AHS...
AndvisittheseAHSWebSites:
•http://www.daylilies.org/daylilies.html
•http://www.daylilies.org
•Daylilies Growing Along The Information High
way: http://www.daylilies.com/daylilies
•For a complete list of Daylily Internet Home Page
Listings, write to Ted White: [email protected]
Page42 Spring/Summer2000
2001:
2002:
2003:
ChicagolandDaylilySociety,
BurrRidge,Illinois,July21-23.
GreaterCincinnatiDaylilyandHostaSociety
SouthernMichiganHemerocallisSociety
MadisonCountyDSandtheSouthwestern
IllinoisHemerocallisSociety,June27-29.
Region 2 Engler
th A
ward
Englerth
Aw
T
his hybridizing excellence award is open to Region 2
hybridizers exclusively. All seedling and cultivars that
have not been registered are eligible. Plants entered as
candidates for this award are to be planted in one of the
designated Region 2 Summer Meeting tour gardens and
are to be marked with a code number only. All attendees of
the Region 2 Meeting are encouraged to vote on ballots to
be supplied by the meeting chairperson. The award medallions are to be engraved with the winner’s name and are
awards to be cherished.
To enter your seedling, ship enough fans of the plant so that
it has a good chance of blooming on the day of the tour.
Information about future annual regional meetings and
the shipment of plants for Englerth consideration and as
guest plants follow below.
Contacts and shipping inf
o ffor
or Engler
th A
ward candiinfo
Englerth
Aw
date plants:
2000 – Chicagoland Da
ylily Socie
ty
Daylily
Society
Pat and Charles Bell
39W582 Deer Run Drive
St Charles, IL 60175
630-377-3705
200
1 – Great
er Cincinnati
2001
Greater
Da
ylily and Hosta Socie
ty
Daylily
Society
Betsy Detmer
1562 New London Road
Hamilton, OH 45013
513-895-6509
2002 – Southern Mic
higan Da
ylily Socie
ty
Michigan
Daylily
Society
Janice Seifert
906 Heather Lake Drive
Clarkston, MI 48348
248-393-0844
[email protected]
2003 – Co-hosts: Madison County DS and
the Southw
est
ern Illinois Hemer
ocallis Socie
ty
Southwest
estern
Hemerocallis
Society
Debbie Gray
Meridian Gardens
8209 Bivens Road
Dorsey IL 62021
618-377-1481
[email protected]
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
This and That, fr
om AHS tto
oR
egional TTopics
opics (continued)
from
Regional
Electing a R
egional Vice President
Regional
President::
It’s YOUR R
esponsibility!
Responsibility!
The Region 2 Nominating Committee's RVP Candidate Gregory
W. McMullen joined the American Hemerocallis Society in 1994,
which was just after his initial involvement with the Indiana
Daylily-Iris Society and after his attendance at the Region 2
Summer Meeting in Indianapolis. More recently, Greg was a
founding member of the Hoosier Daylily Society in an effort to
develop a better support group for others with a serious daylily
addiction. Bryant Millikan, from whom he received a wealth of
growing tips and techniques, spurred his interest in daylilies
and in hybridizing. Greg is eagerly anticipating the first crop of
his miniature spiders in the summer of 2000.
Greg has always felt that continuing education plays an important part of anyone's life. To that end, he and Don Jerabek were
Region 2 Winter Symposium co-chairpersons in 1997, 1998, and
1999, and they were also co-recipients of the 1998 Regional Newsletter Award for Best Article About Hybridizing published in the
AHS Region 4 newsletter. Greg has found that being a member
of the AHS E-mail Robin has been a source for a wealth of information about day
(continued on page 47)
$
$
$
Vote for only one candidate, either the committee’s recommendation or a write-in candidate.
Votes for write-in candidate require permission of the candidate.
The listed candidate was selected by the Region 2 Nominating Committee consisting of Chair Verna
Habermel, Indiana; Harold Steen, Wisconsin; and Rosemary Foltz, Ohio.
Ballo
egion 2 R
VP
Ballott – R
Region
RVP
ear tterm
erm 200
1-2002
2001-2002
Two yyear
Ballo
egion 2 R
VP
Ballott – R
Region
RVP
Two yyear
ear tterm
erm 200
1-2002
2001-2002
&
&
&
The Nominating Committee’s Candidate:
Greg McMullen from Indiana
Vote for only one candidate and mark your ballot
with an “X” in the box.
Ballot must be signed and dated to be counted.
Ballot must be postmarked no later than June 15,
2000.
Mail to:
Mrs. Verna Habermel
3619 Wagner Drive
Floyds Knobs, Indiana 47119
(This Ballot is for Second AHS Family Member)
&
&
&
Vote for only one candidate and mark your ballot
with an “X” in the box.
Ballot must be signed and dated to be counted.
Ballot must be postmarked no later than June 15,
2000.
Mail to:
Mrs. Verna Habermel
3619 Wagner Drive
Floyds Knobs, Indiana 47119
Gregor
Gregor
Gregoryy W
W.. McMullen
Gregoryy W
W.. McMullen
(
(
(___________________________________ (____________________________________
(For Write-in Candidate)
Voter's Signature
Date
City_________________________________State___________
(For Write-in Candidate)
Voter's Signature
Date
City ________________________________State ___________
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
43
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
This and That, fr
om AHS tto
oR
egional TTopics
opics (continued)
from
Regional
Rile
tt R
emembered
Rileyy Barne
Barnett
Remembered
By Verna Habermel
The world of daylilies lost one of it’s most ardent supporters
in September 1999.
Riley Barnett was a grower and hybridizer in the South-
ern Indiana area. He was loved by all who knew him. Riley
started growing daylilies back in the 80’s. Then, about ten
years ago, he started hybridizing. He was heard to complain
that all he was getting were “muddy flowers.” He upgraded
his hybridizing plants, and he purchased some of the newest and best cultivars from Kirchhoff, Morss, the Stamiles,
and the Salters. During the last summer, he was blooming
some really great seedlings, and he had planned to register
some of his creations in the near future.
Riley not only sold daylilies, but he worked with anyone who
needed information about a cultivar. He was truly a teacher
and mentor. In September of this year, just before this death,
Riley donated many STOUT Medal Winners to the Interpretative Center here in southern Indiana for its extensive daylily beds are. Many of the cultivars in these beds were originally donated by Riley and his wife Doris. The Barnetts donated many of the flowers to the local churches’ flower beds.
Riley was so proud of his AHS Display Garden, Barnett’s
Hillside Garden, located in Memphis, Indiana. He served
the AHS as a Garden Judge, and he was working towards
his exhibition judge status.
At the time of his death, Riley was honorary President of
the newly formed Daylily Society of Southern Indiana. He
will be greatly missed by all who knew him, and he will always be remembered for his love of daylilies.
Thank yyou
ou tto
o all of yyou
ou who donat
ed plants,
donated
AHS and Regional
Awards and Honors
Mildred Sc
hlumpf A
ward
Schlumpf
Aw
The award, a silver tray is furnished by Region 14, and
is presented each year at the AHS national convention.
The award is presented to the best entry of slides in a
sequence of events that gives information relating to
daylilies. The award is kept by the winner. Deadline for
nomination is 4/1.(Judging Daylilies Handbook, A2-3/4)
Region 1
4-Slide Sequence A
ward
14-Slide
Aw
Mildred Schlumpf wished to stimulate interest in good
photography and to build up the AHS Slide Library. The
awards, two silver trays, are given each year at the national convention of the AHS for the individual who submits the winning landscape slide. The other will go to
the person who enters the winning slide of an individual
daylily bloom. Nomination deadline is 4/1.(Judging
Daylilies Handbook, A2-2)
A.D. R
oquemore Memorial A
ward
Roquemore
Aw
The award, a pewter plate, is awarded by Mrs. A. L. Trott
to honor the memory of A. D. Roquemore. The award is
presented for the best slide of a cultivar clump showing
the foliage, the scape(s), and the flower(s) to give a total
picture. Nomination deadline is 4/1. (Judging Daylilies
Handbook, A2-3)
Lazarus Memorial A
ward
Aw
The award of artwork is given by Brian and Judy Lazarus
in memory of their son, Devin, and is given for the best
video recording of a presentation relating to daylilies.
Nomination deadline is 4/1.
(Judging Daylilies Handbook, A2-1)
dra
wings, and books tto
o the R
egion 2 Sympodrawings,
Region
sium auction, and thank yyou
ou tto
o all of yyou
ou
who bid on the of
ar
ems:
offfered cultiv
cultivar
arss and it
items:
Polish Y
our Camera Lenses Please!
Your
Region 2 Summer Mee
ting 2000 Will be a P
er
Meeting
Per
erffect
SlideTaking Oppor
tunity
Slide-T
Opportunity
tunity..
We appreciat
e yyour
our suppor
t!
appreciate
support!
Gisela Meckstroth
Thank YYou
ou ffor
or Donating FFunds
unds so
Gener
ously tto
o the R
egion 2 Ne
wsle
tt
er
Generously
Region
Newsle
wslett
tter
Thislistingreflectsthosedonationsreceivedsincethe1999/
2000Fall/WinterpublicationoftheRegionTwoNewsletter
The Wisconsin Da
ylily Socie
ty
Daylily
Society
The Me
tr
opolitan Columbus Da
ylily Socie
ty
Metr
tropolitan
Daylily
Society
Jerr
amela Williams of Cincinnati, Ohio
Jerryy P
P.. and P
Pamela
Da
ylily Socie
ty of Southeast Wisconsin
Daylily
Society
Page44 Spring/Summer2000
You may have noticed that the newsletter’s front
covers try to feature Region 2 gardens which will
be or have been on the Region 2 Summer Meeting
garden tours. The Englerth Award winner is featured on the back cover of the fall issue, and a
Region 2 tour garden on the spring issue.
Try to think ahead while you are planning to take
slides during or for your own regional summer
meeting. If possible, turn your camera for vertical slides that can be used on the 8.5 x 11 inch
front cover, and sideways
for horizontal slides for
the back cover, using
Kodachrome 64 film.
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
This and That, fr
om AHS tto
oR
egional TTopics
opics (continued)
from
Regional
Information About
AHS Personal Awards
Regional Ser
vice A
ward
Service
Aw
In 1974 the Board of Directors established that the
Society may award a limited number of medals each
year to members of the regions for outstanding service at the regional level. An equivalent award, the
International Service Award, may be awarded to a
member of AHS International. Currently serving
board members and Regional Vice Presidents are not
eligible for this award. No more than one AHS Regional
Service medal shall be awarded within a region per
year. A dual award for two members of the same family will count as one. Nominations must come from
members of the nominee's region. In the case of the
international award, nominations may also be submitted by the AHS International Secretary. Nominations
must be sent to the AHS Awards and Honors
Chairman by 1 September. Each nomination must
be typed, single-spaced on one sheet of paper, and
must contain a summary of the nominee's worthiness for this award. Selections are made by secret
ballot at the fall meeting of the Board of directors.
The award presentations are made at the next national convention. Society-sponsored personal
awards are made annually, and the recipients of the
various awards are determined by vote of the Board
of Directors or by special panels of judges.
AHS Board of Directors determines the recipients of the following awards:
The Society may honor two of its members each year
for outstanding service and accomplishment by conferring the following medals:
Helen Field Fisc
her Gold Medal
Fischer
This is the Society's highest honor and is the official
recognition for distinguished and meritorious service
rendered the Society by a member on the national level.
A thorough investigation shall be made in determine
the recipient of the Helen Field Fischer Award. A complete list of services the candidates have rendered the
Society shall be made for all members considered for
this honor. A dual award for two members of the same
family will count as one.
Ber
trand FFarr
arr Silv
er Medal
Bertrand
Silver
This medal is a distinguished honor for members who
have attained outstanding results in the field of hybridizing. For the Bertrand Farr Award, a complete
investigation shall be made of the qualifications and
accomplishments of the hybridizers considered. A list
of all awards (outside awards as well as AHS awards)
and appearances on the Popularity Poll should be
made. Special attention should be given to unusual
accomplishments such as new color breaks, etc. This
award can only be given to a single individual.
In order to assist the Board of Directors in determining the most worthy candidates, AHS members may
send their nominations for these two awards to
the AHS Awards and Honors Chairman by 1
September. Each nomination must be typed, singlespaced on one sheet of paper, and must contain a summary of the nominee's worthiness for this award. Currently serving board members and Regional Vice Presidents are not eligible for either of these awards.
The names of all candidates, with a listing of their
qualifications and accomplishments, shall be presented
to the Board of Directors by the AHS Awards and
Honors Chairman prior to the fall board meeting. Final selection will be made by secret ballot of the board.
Announcement of the winners of both awards, if merited, and presentation of the medals will be made at
the annual Awards and Honors Banquet.
Southw
est
ern Indiana Da
ylily Socie
ty Uses P
oint
Southwest
estern
Daylily
Society
Point
Syst
em ffor
or Distribution of Asse
Assett Plants.
System
S
by Lea Ann Williams
WIDS budgets a certain amount of money each year
for purchase of recently introduced daylilies. These
daylilies are ordered from various hybridizers and are
received in April each year for distribution to members to grow in their gardens for two years. In April of
the second year, the member keeps two fans and returns the remainder to the club. One fan of each cultivar is planted in the club display garden at the Sheriff’s
Training Center in Evansville, Indiana. The remaining fans are auctioned to members.
The first two years these plants were distributed to all
club members by a random drawing. Then a member
suggested a system to reward members who work hardest to benefit SWIDS and promote the daylily. The idea
was to award SWIDS members a certain number of
points for doing various duties associated with the club.
This idea was voted upon and accepted. A point schedule was developed by a committee and accepted by the
membership. A certain number of points are awarded
to each officer, director, chairperson, newsletter editor, etc. Points are awarded for belonging to AHS, attending national, regional, and local meetings. Members receive points for giving programs at meetings or
by representing SWIDS and giving daylily programs
at other community events. Points are given for bringing refreshments, door prizes, writing news articles,
exhibiting daylilies at the show, etc. Points are
awarded for hosting a garden tour at your garden, etc.
There are also per/hour points awarded for duties such
as digging, washing or labeling plants for the sale and
many other activities.
Members are responsible for reporting their points
monthly to the “point tabulator,” who records and tabulates all points. (The “point keeper” also receives points
for this responsibility.) The SWIDS point keeper has
a system set up on a computer.
In April, these points are then used to determine the
position for which the newly-purchased asset plants
are chosen. The member with the highest number of
(continued next page)
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
45
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Thisand That, fr
om AHStoRegionalTopics (Continued)
from
SWIDS P
oint Syst
em (continued from page 44)
Point
System
points for the previous year gets first choice, etc. When
the asset plants are brought back after two years for
auction, members use the same previous year’s points
to bid on these plants. One point is worth $1.00. They
may also use cash if they wish.
There are other requirements that must be met in order to receive asset plants. The SWIDS member must
be an AHS member and must have accumulated a minimum of 60 points during the previous year.
The “point system” has been very successful. Members
are eager to volunteer and take a more active part in
club functions. Everyone can earn points in some way
if they choose. If members are physically unable to
perform labor such as digging, they can earn points by
providing refreshments, donating door prizes or
through contributing in a number of other activities.
If you would like more details on the point system, contact Don or Lea Ann Williams at 812-922-5288 or
[email protected]. We would be happy to help your
club set up a similar system for your asset plant distribution.
Nor
thern Gr
own Da
ylilies and Gr
owing Da
ylilies
Northern
Gro
Daylilies
Gro
Daylilies
Hydr
oponically (continued from page 29)
Hydroponically
will involve spraying the hydroponic TC plants with growth
regulators to induce plant multiplication or change ploidy.
He feels many new fascinating daylily happenings are on
the horizon, whether achieved by genetic engineering, genegun technology, chemical mutants, or radiation (gamma, xray, etc.). Mr. Doorakian believes we need national/regional
testing of all daylily introductions along with a hardiness
rating being assigned.
Mr. Doorakian closed his program with this motivational
advice: "We are in the new Millennium. Old rules do not
apply. We are what we think we are. Reinvent yourself. Learn
to dance. Embrace new heights. Explore new territory. Mentor someone young or old. Do what you love."
Some Moments from the Symposium
Blac
k Sw
amp Hosta and Da
ylily Socie
ty
Black
Swamp
Daylily
Society
1st
Centur
y
Pr
ojects
f
or
the
2
21st Century
Projects for
The Black Swamp Hosta and Daylily Society has some new and special projects:
The 21st Century Project is a joint, longterm, educational project of the BSHDS at
the Toledo Botanical Gardens (TBG) in Toledo, Ohio. The project's mission is to promote the appreciation and cultivation of daylilies and hostas in the home garden and in
the public landscape. This mission will be pursued through
the establishment of comprehensive daylily and hosta collections and displays whose botanical diversity and depth of presentation will generate return visits by the casual stroller and
novice gardener, avid gardeners, and daylily fanciers right
along to the master gardeners and professional landscape designers. The Society, along with TBG, will conduct educational
workshops that will focus on the cultivation of daylilies.
The centerpiece of TBG's daylily collection is the Crescent
Bed located in the Perennial Garden. The display plan of
this collection is based on sectional groupings of all the major AHS award winners, including the Stout Silver Medal,
Donn Fisher Memorial Award, Annie T. Giles Award,
Lenington All-America Award, Ida Munson Award, L. Ernest
Plouf Award, Don C. Stevens Award, Harris Olson Spider
Award, Eugene S. Foster Award, the James E. Marsh Award
winners, and the species daylilies. All award winners are
arranged by year in which the award was won.
Several hundred more daylilies are also on display with many
new cultivars being added each year. AHS members are encouraged to plan a trip to Toledo to see this complete display
of award winners that have been planted at TBG.
Contact: Don Bixler, President, 2550 Cherry Ridge Dr., Fremont,
OH 43240 Tel: 419-0355-8116 Email: [email protected]
Page46 Spring/Summer2000
Paul Limmer from New York and Dr. Joann Stewart
from Georgia who wrote about the Region 2 Symposium
presentations.
Anxious “equipment” moments for Curt Hanson
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
AHS Exhibition Judges for Region 2
byJayTurman,Chairman,AHSJudgesandClinicsCommittee
Name, S
tatus, Expiration Dat
e
Status,
Date
Name, S
tatus, Expiration Dat
e
Status,
Date
Name, S
tatus, Expiration Dat
e
Status,
Date
Connie Abel ........................ S ............. 2000
Lee A. Alden ....................... S ............. 2002
Daniel E. Bachman ............ EX .......... 2000
Rosemary Balazs ................ E/j .......... 2002
Greg Bartoshuk .................. S ............. 2000
Bob Bearce .......................... E/j .......... 2001
Dr. Caroline Benser ........... EX .......... 2000
Don Bixler ........................... E/j .......... 2001
Ann Bixler ........................... E/j .......... 2001
Dolores C. Bourisaw .......... EX, I ...... 2002
Patricia Callis ..................... S ............. 2000
Phyllis Cantini ................... E/j .......... 2000
Thomas J. Connell ............. EX .......... 2003
Patrick J. Conway .............. S ............. 2000
Kathleen Dargel ................. S ............. 2002
Judy Davisson .................... S ............. 1999
Patricia Del Vecchio ........... S ............. 2000
Armand DeLisle ................. S ............. 2002
Barbara DeLisle ................. S ............. 2002
Lu Dickhaut ........................ EX, I ...... 2003
Orville Dickhaut ................. EX, I ...... 2003
Nina Dix .............................. E/h .................
J. Paul Downie, DDS ......... E/j .......... 2002
Lura Emig ........................... EX .......... 2001
John Everitt ........................ S ............. 1999
Shirley Farmer ................... EX .......... 2001
Gary Faust .......................... S ............. 2002
Dale Finney ........................ EX .......... 2003
Marjorie Finney ................. EX .......... 2003
Sharon Fitzpatrick ............. EX .......... 2003
Rosemarie Foltz ................. EX, I ...... 2003
Richard L. Ford .................. EX, I ...... 2002
Jon L. Fowler ...................... E/j .......... 2001
Janet Gordon ...................... EX .......... 2003
Deborah L. Gray ................. S ............. 2002
Rosalyn Haag ..................... S ............. 2000
Verna Habermel ................. S ............. 2002
Virginia L. Heller ............... EX, I ...... 2002
Patricia Crooks Henley ...... EX, I ...... 2002
Richard D. Henley .............. EX, I ...... 2003
Anita M. Holst .................... S ............. 2002
Jean Johnson ...................... EX .......... 2001
Ken Johnson ....................... EX .......... 2001
Marie Johnson .................... S ............. 2002
Martin Kamensky .............. EX .......... 2000
Kimberly Kaufman ............ EX .......... 2001
Sarah B. Keller ................... S ............. 1999
Barbara J. Kelly ................. EX .......... 2002
William F. (Bill) Kelly ........ EX .......... 2002
Joan Kepf ............................ S ............. 2002
Charles Kirin ...................... EX .......... 2003
Mildred (Millie) Kirin ........ EX .......... 2003
Margaret Klipp ................... EX .......... 2002
Randall E. Klipp ................. EX .......... 2002
Amy Klipp ........................... E/j .......... 2001
Dorothy Koons .................... E/j .......... 2000
Irene L. Koziel .................... S ............. 2002
Jennifer Kuehn .................. S ............. 2000
Carol Lammi ....................... S ............. 2002
Karen Lantz ........................ S ............. 2000
Joanne E. Larson ............... EX, I ...... 2003
Mary Anne Leisen .............. E/j .......... 2001
Anthony C. Lysek ............... S ............. 2000
Carol McClintock ............... EX .......... 2001
Patrice McCollum ............... EX .......... 2003
James McMurry ................. S ............. 2000
Rebecca McMurry .............. S ............. 2000
Gisela Meckstroth .............. EX .......... 2003
Carol Meglan ...................... S ............. 2002
Mary Milanowski ............... S ............. 2000
Thomas D. .Milanowski ...... S ............. 2000
Edwin L. Myers .................. EX .......... 2000
Virginia Myers .................... EX .......... 2000
C. Daniel Overholser ......... EX .......... 2000
Charles R. Parshell ............ S ............. 2002
William A. Potter ............... EX .......... 2000
Carol J. Reich ..................... EX .......... 2000
Hal H. Rice ......................... EX, I ...... 2002
Shawn Rickly ...................... S ............. 2000
Sandra Grace Ross ............. EX .......... 2000
Caryl Schaer ....................... E/j .......... 2001
Martha Seaman .................. EX .......... 2000
Marie Seaman .................... E/j .......... 2001
Janice Seifert ...................... EX .......... 2000
Bill Sevetson ....................... S ............. 2000
Leo E. Sharp, Sr. ................ E/j .......... 2000
Greg Schindler ................... S ............. 2002
Alice Simon ......................... E/j .......... 2001
G. Bruce Smith ................... S ............. 2001
Marjorie C. Soules .............. EX, I ...... 2002
Elizabeth JeanStallcop ........ EX .......... 2003
Harold Steen ....................... E/j .......... 2000
Florence E. Stout ............... E/h .................
Bette Thomsen ................... EX .......... 2003
Gerard Vandermeer ........... S ............. 2002
D. Steve Varner .................. E/h
Ann Waite ........................... EX .......... 2002
Ruth S. Whithead ............... EX .......... 2000
Rita Whitney ...................... S ............. 2000
Ethel Wilcox ....................... S ............. 2002
Bob Wilcox .......................... S ............. 2002
Lea Ann Williams .............. S ............. 2002
Don R. Williams ................. S ............. 2002
Dr. Virginia Winkler .......... EX, I ...... 2002
William (Bill) Wright ......... S ............. 2000
Legend:
EX =Senior Exhibition Judge
E/j =Junior Exhibition Judge
E/h =Honorary Exhibition Judge (not eligible to judge)
I
=Accredited Clinic Instructor
S
=Student in Training
Date = Expiration of accreditation
*Serving 1-year hardship extension
Ja
urman, Chairman
Jayy TTurman,
AHS Exhibition Judges and Clinics Committ
ee
Committee
3505 R
uland Place
Ruland
Nashville, TN 3372
72
15-1
811
721
5-18
E-mail: Ja
yT
[email protected]
JayT
[email protected]
N ot
e:
ote:
Status as of 1/1/2000
Accreditation for 2000 is subject to payment of AHS dues by
January 1, 2000.
A Le
tt
er fr
om our R
egional Exhibition Judges Liaison Ric
har
d For
d
Lett
tter
from
Regional
Richar
hard
Ford
Here we are again looking forward to another summer of viewing fabulous blooms, visiting great gardens,
and talking hours about daylilies to friends and strangers. Then, there are the daylily club shows.
This is still another facet of growing, displaying, and loving daylilies. The club show is putting daylilies at
their best on the show table in front of the public. In the garden we take care to make daylilies look their
best. Well, we do the same at the show table, but in a very meticulous fashion. Friends come in handy to
help learn these meticulous “tricks of the trade.” All this fuss is for ribbons and honors at the show and for
the public to learn more about daylilies.
This leads us to “The Judge,” or should I say judges. They are the ones that take the time to observe
daylilies constantly in all settings. Actually, we all do that anyway, but judges have a good reason to look.
(continued on page 47)
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
47
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
AHS Garden Judges for Region 2
Illinois
Indiana
Rosemary Balazs ............. 2002
Charles Bell ..................... 2001
Patricia Bell ..................... 2001
Karyn Berner .................. 2000
Delores Bourisaw ............ 2003
Luella Dickhaut ........ I .. 2000
Orville Dickhaut ........ I .. 2000
Leslie A. Fischer .............. 2003
Nona E. Ford ................... 2001
Richard L. Ford ............... 2001
Geraldine Frankenberger2001
James Frankenberger ..... 2004
Kimberly A. Kaufman ..... 2003
Barbara J. Kelly .............. 2001
William F. Kelly .............. 2001
Charles Kirin ................... 2000
Mildred Kirin ................... 2002
Margaret M. Klipp .......... 2003
Randall E. Klipp .............. 2003
Joyce A. Laben ................ 2003
Joanne E. Larson ............ 2000
Mary Anne Leisen ........... 2000
Carol R. McClintock ........ 2002
Gayle A. Menges ............. 2001
Lorraine G. Musak .......... 2001
William A. Potter ............ 2001
Elizabeth Raz .................. 2002
Bill Sevetson .................... 2001
Barbara Sondalle ............ 2001
Mrs. Bette Thomsen ....... 2000
D. Steve Varner ................ Hon
William P. Vaughn .......... 2000
Ann Waite ........................ 2001
George Paul Watts ........... Hon
Dale Finney ..................... 2000
Marjorie Finney .............. 2000
John Habermel ................ 2003
Verna Habermel .............. 2003
Don Jerabek .................... 2001
Janice F. Kraft ......... N .. 2004
Robert E. Kraft ......... N .. 2004
Greg McMullen ................ 2001
C. Daniel Overholser ...... 2000
Leo E. Sharp, Sr. ....... I .. 2000
Donald C. Smith .............. 2001
Clarence Soules ................ Hon
Marjorie Soules ............... 2002
Elizabeth Jean Stallcop .. 2001
Rosalie Stam .................... 2003
Mary B. Stone .................. 2003
Melvin (Joe) Stone .......... 2002
Don Williams ................... 2002
Lea Ann Williams ........... 2002
Doris Winton ................... 2003
Michigan
Richard Adams ................ 2001
Phyllis Cantini ............ I 2003 *
John P. Cody .................... 2002
Kathleen Dargel .............. 2003
Glenn Davisson ............... 2003
Judy Davisson ................. 2003
Armand J. Delisle .... N .. 2004
Barbara A. Delisle .... N .. 2004
Jed Fulkerson .................. 2003
Ila A. Fulkerson ....... N .. 2004
James Guzinski ......... I .. 2003
Virginia L. Heller ............ 2001
Martin Kamensky ........... 2001
Joan E. Kepf .................... 2003
Chris Kruer ..................... 2000
Patrice McCollum ............ 2001
Mary Milanowski ............ 2004
Tom Milanowski .............. 2002
Harris E. Olson ............... 2000
Hal H. Rice ................ I .. 2000
Janice Seifert ................... 2001
Douglas Jay Veurink ...... 2003
Arlene E. Welsh .............. 2003
Ohio
Connie Abel ..................... 2001
Daniel E. Bachman ......... 2002
Gerda E. Brooker ............ 2003
Malcolm D. Brooker ........ 2003
Patricia Callis .................. 2002
Sharon Fitzpatrick .... I .. 2002
Rosemarie Foltz ........ I .. 2001
Curt Hanson .............. I .. 2000
Patricia Crooks Henley I .. 2004
Richard Henley ................ 2004
Gail A. Johannes ............. 2002
William C. Johannes ....... 2002
Jean Johnson ................... 2002
Ken Johnson .................... 2002
James McMurry .............. 2002
Rebecca McMurry ........... 2002
Gisela Meckstroth ........... 2001
Robert Meckstroth .......... 2002
Edwin L. Myers ............... 2002
Virginia Myers ................. 2004
James Nicholson ............. 2002
Richard Norris ................. 2004
Sandra Grace Ross .......... 2001
Martha Seaman ............... 2000
Robert Shaver .................. 2002
Robert Terbeek ................. Hon
Wisconsin
Dr. Caroline Benser ........ 2004
Dr. Jerry Benser ....... I .. 2004
Howard L. Brookins . N .. 2004
Dave Butcher ................... 2004
Janet Gordon ................... 2004
Ruth Z. Horrall ......... N .. 2004
Douglas P. Maxwell . N .. 2004
Martha D. Maxwell .. N .. 2004
Paul Meske ...................... 2002
Hiram Pearcy .................. 2003
William E. Powell ............ 2002
Legend:
Hon =
N
=
I
=
200X =
*
=
Honorary
New Judge
Instructor
Expiration date
Garden
Judges Liaison
No
tice of Impor
tant Changes R
egarding the AHS Garden Judges W
or
kshops
Notice
Important
Regarding
Wor
orkshops
Beginning with 1999, prospective new AHS Garden Judges will be required to take two workshops:
Workshop I and Workshop II
Workshop I
This workshop is designed to educate AHS membership in the area of the AHS Honors and Awards system,
differentiating those awards that are determined by the Garden Judge and those awards that are determined by the various AHS Honors and Awards committee. Workshop I also instructs what a Garden Judge
is and how Garden Judges evaluate seedlings and registered cultivars.
Workshop II
This workshop costs $5.00 and is designed for those AHS members wishing to join the ranks as a Garden
Judge. Current Garden Judges are required to attend this workshop at least once in the last three years of
their current term for renewal purposes. They may attend this workshop yearly for noncredit purposes
(free).
Workshop I and II will continue to be offered during the Region 2 Annual Summer Meetings, and nothing
prohibits clubs from sponsoring a Workshop I at a club meeting. Call your Region 2 Liaison or RVP for
details.
Region Two currently has 110 active Garden Judges and 4 Honorary Garden Judges. We encourage all
Region AHS members to attend a Workshop I and to give serious consideration to becoming an AHS Garden
Judge.
Garden Judges are the bac
kbone of the a
wards syst
em ffor
or recognizing regist
ered cultiv
ar
s.
backbone
aw
system
registered
cultivar
ars.
Page48 Spring/Summer2000
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Electing a R
egional Vice President
Regional
President::
esponsibility! (continued from page 37)
Responsibility!
It’s YOUR R
lilies, always keeping in mind that one can get out of a
round robin what one puts back in to it. Greg also went
back to college to earn a Master of Business Administration degree from Indiana University in 1999, an undertaking which took time away from gardening and
hybridizing.
Greg and Don are co-proprietors of Watson Park
Dayliles, which was moved "lock, stock, and barrel" in
1997 from its former urban setting to a new location
on the north side of Indianapolis. Moving 425 cultivars and 1,000 seedlings took a lot of time, and through
it all they were able to maintain their AHS Display
Garden status, which was first received in 1996. They
are in the second year of their five-year garden plan,
with much to do yet in terms of landscape development. Daylilies, hostas, and northern-hardy magnolias were first items to be installed. Greg has been a
Garden Judge since 1997 and has been on the AHS
Display Gardens Committee since 1998. Greg enjoys
entering plant shows, and he has won Best of Show for
both daylilies and hostas. Greg is also a member of the
American Hosta Society, the Indianapolis Hosta Society, and the Indianapolis Museum of Art Horticultural
Society, where he assisted with the planting of the
Bryant Millikan Memorial garden.
Professionally, Greg is a practicing architect, with a
degree from the University of Cincinnati. Greg is a
member of the American Institute of Architects and
The National Trust for Historic Preservation.
A ffew
ew W
or
ds fr
om our R
egional Exhibition Judges Liaison
Wor
ords
from
Regional
Ric
har
d For
d (continued from page 45)
Richar
hard
Ford
Training is involved with becoming a AHS Exhibition
Judge. Along with their own time observing and learning, judges attend clinics at regional and national meetings on three levels. Clinic-I deals with general topics
of knowledge for a judge and a test over the material.
Clinic-II is the actual training and testing to become a
junior exhibition judge. Then, with experience as a
show judge and with displaying at an accredited AHS
show, you are ready to become a senior judge. ClinicIII is for junior and senior judges as a refresher course
of all the training from Clinics I and II. Then there is
an open discussion of problems encountered as a judge.
This is then reported to the national committee and
from that we can develop better shows and rules to
govern them.
For those of you up to the challenge, becoming a judge
can be very rewarding. You will provide a service to
the region and its clubs by helping educate the public
to all the possibilities of daylilies. Personally, you will
have an insight into the workings of one of the biggest
undertakings of AHS–an accredited AHS daylily show–
that only a few AHS members have.
Look for the sign-up for Clinics I, II, and III when your
registration for the regional meeting. I hope to see new
faces in our clinics this year. Plenty of people will help
get you on the road to an interesting job–judging. See
you then.
Club Information and
Events Calendar
Ba
ylily Buds
Bayy Area Da
Daylily
This new club was formed on April 8, 1999, and officers
elected are:
• Chairman: Leo Bordeleau • Secretary: Luella Korth
• Treasurer: Vonnie Baye • Newsletter: Phil Korth
• Activities: Jan and Jerry Siudzinski, Kym Rappert, Judy
DeCaster, Pat Kaster, Patcee Bucher, and Ruth
Trowbridge.
The club's first activity was a garden tour in July. A plant
sale was held in September in conjunction with the Green
Bay Botanical Garden open house. Members sold over 300
plants, over $1000 was raised, and 9 new members joined
the new club–bringing membership to 62. Plans for 2000
include a flower show on July 23.
Blac
k Sw
amp Hosta & Da
ylily Socie
ty
Black
Swamp
Daylily
Society
May 6: ........................ Bus Tour to Cincinnati Flower Show
May 20, 8 am: Churchill’s, Perrysburg, OH Annual Plant Sale
June 3, 9 am: ....... Toledo Botanical Garden Hosta Garden.
Work Day-Continuation of 21st Century Project
June and July Dates to be announced
Members Garden Tours/Hosta Gardens and Daylily Gardens
View hosta gardens in June – View daylily gardens in July.
July 9, 8 am: ................................. Toledo Botanical Garden
Non-Accredited Daylily Show, Conference Center
Show open to the public 2 to 4 pm
August 19, 9 am: ........................... Toledo Botanical Garden
Daylily Garden Work Day. Continuation of 21st Century
Project
August 19, 1 pmDaylily Auction - Plants from Daylily Host
Program
September 16 1:30 pm: Meet at Lavender Blue Herb Farm
in Waterville for tour by Valerie Trudeau and Members’
Plant Exchange
October 14 1:30 pm: . TBG Conference Center Open Forum
Town Hall Type Program
”Putting Your Garden to Bed for Winter”
November 11 12:30 pm: .... Way Public Library, Perrysburg
Potluck - Speaker TBA
We began the new year with our annual dinner meeting with
Jim Wilkins, President of the American Hosta Society, as
guest speaker, and “Swamp Bucks” were awarded to members who had served the society this past year. In February
we had Joyce Blanton take us on a spring tour of Longwood
and Winterthur Gardens. In March, Richard Kenyon, formerly of 577 Foundation, talked about “Perennials.” Our 21st
Century committee is busy planning projects for 2000 at TBG,
and focusing on program for our Hosta and Daylily Work
Days to be held later this summer.
Contact Person: Charlene Patz Telephone: 419-874-8964
Email: [email protected]
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
49
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Club Information and Events Calendar (continued)
For
ayne Da
ylily Socie
ty
ortt W
Wa
Daylily
Society
ty,, Inc.
President J. Paul Downey reports that the club elders have
spoken, and there will be a club Foellinger-Freimann Daylily
Show on Saturday, July 15. Wow!
•Spring Round Up Meeting.... ........ Date to be announced*
•Louisville Daylily Show .......................... Sunday, June 25
•Indianapolis Daylily Show ...................... Saturday, July 1
•Fort Wayne Daylily Display* Show ..... Saturday, July 15
•Summer Show meeting........ ......... Date to be announced*
•Fall Meeting with Speaker Bob Ellison of Ellison
Perennials, Rockford, Illinois ......... Date and location to be
announced*
*Contact President Downey for time and dates.
Great
er Cincinnati Da
ylily & Hosta Socie
ty
Greater
Daylily
Society
President John Duke and the club members have planned
this events calendar:
April 6 .. Club meeting and program Daylily Companion
Plants.
May 11 ...... Club meeting, program Favorite Hostas and
Grooming.
•May 20 ...................... Tour of members' Hosta gardens.
•June 3 ..................... 11th Annual Hosta Cut-Leaf Show
•June 8 ....................... Club meeting and Adopt-a-Plant.
•July 1 ................................... 17th Annual Daylily Show
•July 8 ...................... Tours of members' daylily gardens
•July 22 ................................... Members' bus tour to the
......................................................... Louisville, KY, area.
•August 5 ........... Joint Hosta meeting with Dayton and
................................................................ Columbus clubs.
•August 19 ............................... Plant exchange, auction,
............................................................. and potluck lunch.
•September 21 ..................................... Club meeting and
...................................................... Judy's Goodie Auction.
•October 21 ............................................ Annual Banquet
Southw
est
ern Illinois Da
ylily Club
Southwest
estern
Daylily
Agnes Miller reports that the club will have a great program besides the regular meeting in 2000. Activities will
include a plant sale, visits to members yards, the annual
flower show, an out-of-state trip to visit some beautiful gardens, and visits to people who are in hospitals. Club members will make it a point to vote in the Region 2 Popularity
Poll.
RPD’s and Editor’ Note: Please share your club news with
others in our region. Send summarized information, please.
Deadlines are March 1 and September 1.
Page50 Spring/Summer2000
Hoosier Da
ylily Socie
ty Inc.
Daylily
Society
Don Jerabek reports this Hoosier Calendar of Events:
•February 24, 2000, 7:00 pm, Carmel City Hall.
Plan on attending this month to experience a wonderful
tour of AHS Display Gardens organized by Melanie
Vassalo, AHS Display Garden Chairperson.
•March 23, 2000, 7:00 pm, Carmel City Hall.
March will be an exciting month, as Jamie Gossard of Columbus, Ohio, will visit us. Jamie will talk about his Spider
Breeding Program and will astound us with some of his wonderful scientific knowledge about propagation.
•April 27, 2000, 7:00 pm, Carmel City Hall
We will have the pleasure of having local daylily grower
Michael Whitlock recant his talk that was first presented at
Region 2 Symposium 1996 on local hybridizer Bryant
Millikan.
•May 25, 2000, 7:00 pm, Carmel City Hall
Mecca Madness! Recent slides taken in Florida gardens
will be presented, as well as a speaker to be announced.
•Summer Hiatus
•September 28, 2000, 7:00 pm, Carmel City Hall
Monthly Meeting
•October 26, 2000, 7:00 pm, Carmel City Hall
Monthly Meeting
•November 16, 2000, 7:00 pm, Carmel City Hall
Monthly Meeting
The club has a “Hoods-link” to the Internet:
http://www.garden.dmans.com/jshields/Hoosier/
Ohio Da
ylily Socie
ty
Daylily
Society
President Rosemarie Foltz reports these club activities and
dates for 2000. Meetings will be held at Kingwood Center in
Mansfield, Ohio. Also, please note that the show chair will
be Sandy Ross.
•July 16 ............. Daylily Show
•August 20 ........ Daylily sale at noon, followed by auction
•November 5 ..... Fall Meeting at 1:30 pm
The Da
ylily Socie
ty of Southeast Wisconsin
Daylily
Society
New officers for the year 2000 are:
President: ..................... Don Coshun (262-547-2408)
Vice President: ......... Zannah Crowe (262-677-1392)
Secretary: ................... Sue Corcoran (262-679-3180)
Treasurer: ......................... Ed Kraus (414-529-1213)
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Club Information and Events Calendar (continued)
Me
tr
opolitan Columbus Da
ylily Socie
ty
Metr
tropolitan
Daylily
Society
Bill Johannes reports:
Under the leadership of President Pete Mondron and with
the help of scores of willing member volunteers, MCDS hasn’t
missed a beat since hosting last year’s Region 2 Summer
meeting.
Our annual plant sale and auction in August was such a
financial success that the club made grants to AHS Region 2
(for the newsletter), the AHS Monroe Endowment Fund, and
Franklin Park Conservatory in Columbus. Meetings have
been well attended, with member Lynn Fronk showing how
to include daylilies in flower arrangements at the November meeting. Florida hybridizer MATTHEW KASKEL
warmed a winter-weary crowd at the February meeting with
his slides and breeding program discussion.
Almost 100 members and family attended the annual Holiday potluck and gift exchange in December, chaired by Jan
Clark and Gisela Meckstroth.
Four more MCDS member gardens were approved as AHS
Display Gardens, bringing the total to 9 MCDS member gardens honored with the AHS distinction. We are particularly
proud of youth member, Nick Lucius, who is the First AHS
Youth Member to achieve AHS Display Garden status.
Membership, after annual renewals, now stands at 223, with
145 of our members also belonging to AHS.
We look forward to our upcoming activities and invite anyone
in the Central Ohio area to join us for fun and fellowship.
May 13 ..........................................................................
Spring meeting. Plant auction and drawing 2 pm
Franklin Park Conservatory.
July 9 ............................................................................
Annual MCDS Daylily Show Franklin Park Conservatory
August 19 .....................................................................
Annual MCDS Plant Sale (open to the public) 10 am
Franklin Park Conservatory.
November 5 .................................................................
Fall meeting and speaker (TBA) 2 pm Franklin Park
Conservatory December 10 Holiday Potluck and gift
exchange 6 pm Franklin Park Conservatory
Grand V
alle
ylily Socie
ty
Valle
alleyy Da
Daylily
Society
Correspondent Jan Burd reports that GVDS has made
another donation to Frederick Meijer Gardens. The
entrance was changed, and the decision was made to buy
plants for the island beds.
Projects at Habitat for Humanity and Gilda's House will
be the focus for the 2000 growing season, and club members are always looking for community projects which will
showcase daylilies.
Other activities remain the same, and members still
maintain the daylily beds at Ronald McDonald House.
Nor
thshore Iris & Da
ylily Socie
ty
Northshore
Daylily
Society
President Alice Simon reports the following schedule of
events:
•April 2 ........................ Spring Fling Buffet and Program
•May 7 ............................................. Program and Meeting
•May 27 ...................................... Sale of Iris and Daylilies
•May 28 ................................................ Iris Show and Sale
•June* ................................................................... Bus Trip
•July 29 ...................................... Sale of Iris and Daylilies
•July 30 .......................................... Daylily Show and Sale
•Aug. 26 ............................................................... Late Sale
•Aug. 27 ............................................................... Late Sale
•Sept. 3 ........................................... Program and Meeting
•Oct. 1 ............................................. Program and Meeting
•Nov. 5 ......................................... Election and Chili Bash
*For date of bus trip, contact Alice Simon.
The Club is in the process of planting a display garden of
both Iris and Daylilies at Friendship Park in Des Plaines.
This will be our second year, and we still have quite a bit of
work to do; but, we should have some good bloom this season.
Southern Mic
higan Hemer
ocallis Socie
ty
Michigan
Hemerocallis
Society
Our Calendar for 2000:
May 19 ........ General Meeting; Gardening Forum by local
............................................................................... members
June 23 .... General Meeting; Preparing for the Exhibition
Show, July 7 ...................................... Speaker Ned Roberts
July 8 ........................................................ Show, Plant sale
July 9 ................... Picnic, Garden Judge Workshops I & II
Aug. 26 ................................................................ Plant sale
Sep. 17 .................................................. Annual Corn Roast
Nov. 3 ... General Meeting; speaker: Melanie Vassallo,NY
Dec. 11 ...................................................... General Meeting
Southern Michigan Hemerocallis Society is sponsoring the 2002 AHS National Convention. Hal Rice is
chairman, Armand DeLisle is co-chair.
We are working on a theme, and logo that will be
"catchy."
Contact Phyllis Cantini at:
3140 Elder Road North, Orchard Lake, MI 48324-2416
email: [email protected]
Phone: 248-363-2352
We are planning to put out the red carpet for the 2002
National Convention attendees.
Consider getting or giving an AHS Life Membership
at this year's bargain price (see front inside cover)! It
will cost more next year.
(See A Letter from our Director, page 3.)
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
51
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Club Information and Events Calendar (continued)
Southw
est
ern Indiana Da
ylily Socie
ty
Southwest
estern
Daylily
Society
Feb. 19:
June 25:
July 1:
Oct. 21:
SPECIAL EVENTS FOR 2000
Special Meeting with John and Faye Shooter
from Marietta Gardens in Marietta, North
Carolina.
Annual Daylily Exhibition and Sale at Washington Square Mall in Evansville, Indiana.
Bus trip to visit AHS Display Gardens: John
and Verna Habermel’s Daylily Gardens of
Floyds Knobs and Joe and Mary Stone’s
Stoneridge Daylily Garden.
Special Meeting with Dan Hansen from Lady
Bug Daylilies in Geneva, Florida.
Southw
est
ern Indiana Da
ylily Socie
ty A
ward of Appreciation
Southwest
estern
Daylily
Society
Aw
Present
ed tto
o Don and Lea Ann Williams
Presented
Don and Lea Ann Williams were surprised at the SWIDS
Christmas party with a special Award of Appreciation for
their efforts in promoting the daylily and the organization.
Don and Lea Ann were founders of SWIDS in October, 1996,
along with Arthur and Rae Schroeder and Paul and Judi
Aucoin. In this short time, SWIDS has grown to over 80
enthusiastic members. Don was President of SWIDS for the
first two years and has been sale chairman for the past three
years. He will again be sale chairman this year. Lea Ann
has been Secretary since SWIDS began. She was chairperson for their first official AHS show in 1999 and accepted
the responsibility again this year.
Da
ylily Socie
ty of Southern Indiana
Daylily
Society
A new club has formed in Region 2: Daylily Society of
Southern Indiana. The officers for 2000 are as follows:
John F. Habermel ......................... President
Melvin (Joe) Stone ................ Vice President
Mary Stone, ................................... Treasurer
Billie Johnson ................................ Secretary
The new club has as a primary goal, education, especially of
youth, and has affiliated with the Prossor School of Technology. The School offers a program in horticulture with emphasis on landscaping and gardening. The Daylily Society
of Southern Indiana has offered to assist students in learning the culture of daylilies including ideal soil preparation
and hybridizing.
Although only four months old, there are already 32 dues
paying members. Twelve members of the club are members
of the AHS. One of the next major projects, according to President John Habermel, will be to develop bylaws for the club.
Club members have donated daylilies to the students for
use in the School’s greenhouse and for the students to use in
landscaping projects and will participate with the students
in daylily plant sales in the future.
Southw
est
ern Illinois Hemer
ocallis Socie
ty
Southwest
estern
Hemerocallis
Society
President Lu Dickhaut reports that the Southwestern
Illinois Hemerocallis Society will co-host the Region 2
Meeting in 2003 with the Madison County Daylily
Society. She also tells us about the following activities:
•May 5 ...... Companion Plant Sale (donated by members)
•June 24 Daylily display and sale in Famous Barr Court,
.............................................................. Alton Square Mall.
•July 2 ................................. Garden tours of area gardens
•Aug. 4 .................................. Daylily auction for members
•Aug. (not set yet) ...... Picnic at Muenstermann Pavilion,
.................................... Gordon Moore Park, Alton, Illinois
•September 9 ............................................. Civic Planting*
•Dec. 3 ........................................................... Holiday party
*Note: Civic Planting is to be in Bethalto in
appreciation of the large facility they allow us to use
for our meetings.
Page52 Spring/Summer2000
John Habermel, Joe Stone, Rose Lyons, (behind Rose) Lewis
Lyons, Mary Stone, (behind Mary) Bob Kraft, Lea Ann Williams,
Don williams, Verna Habermel, Mary Phillips, John Phillips,
Sandy Russell, Dennis Russell, Judy Heath, Jan Bond, David
Kirchhoff, David Schaffer, Norman Rainey.
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Club Inf
ormation and
Information
Ev
ents Calendar (continued)
Events
Madison County Da
ylily Socie
ty
Daylily
Society
Pam Hurd is pleased to announced that the
Southwestern Illinois Hemerocallis Society of
Granite City has changed its club name to:
Madison County Daylily Society.
President:
618-797-6038
Vice President:
618-465-5869
Treasurer:
618-452-5866
Secretary:
(618-931-7146
News Correspondent:
314-353-4839
Janice Hammers
Sandy Monroe
Helen Mihu
Marianne James
Pam Hurd
Scheduled meetings and events are as follows:
March 2 Regular meeting
May 4 Daylily auction & meeting
May 13 Annual Spring Companion plant sale
June 22 Pre-show meeting place to be announced
July 1 Annual Daylily Show & Sale @ Alton Square
Mall Alton Illinois
August 4 Regular meeting
October 5 Regular meeting
December Club Christmas Party To be announced
All meeting are at the Granite City Eagles on
Madison Ave. In Granite City, IL. unless otherwise
noted. Please contact the club correspondent Pam
Hurd at 314-353-4839 or email her at
[email protected] for directions to any club
event or for further information.
Take Note
The Madison County DS and the Southwestern Illinois Hemerocallis Society will co-host the Region 2
Summer Meeting from June 27 to 29 in 2003.
Debbie Gray will be in charge of the Englerth bed, and
plants should be mailed to her at Meridian Gardens 8209
Bivens Road, Dorsey Il 62021. Her phone number is
(618) 377-1481. The daylily bed for the Englerth award
candidates will be ready so hybridizers can send plants
late this coming summer or fall. (Please refer also to
page 41, This and That, from AHS to Regional Topics.)
Miami V
alle
ylily &
Valle
alleyy Da
Daylily
Hardy P
erennial Socie
ty
Perennial
Society
Shirley Farmer reports that plans for the group
hopefully will include a trip to Jamie Gossard’s
and a picnic at her new home (see back insidecover).
Welcome, New Region 2 Members!
Illinois
Jim Banning
4218 Country Meadow Lane
Quincy, IL 62301
Jack W & Dorothy M Barnett
908 Feldkamp Ave.
Springfield, IL 62704-2312
Debbie Brantley
1 Madrid Rd.
Murphysboro, IL 62966
Jenifer Chambers
49W 592 Hinckley Rd.
Big Rock, IL 60511
Mary Clark
2305 Benderwirt Ave
Rockford, IL 61103
Kae Coates
RR 3 Box 66
Roodhouse, IL 62082
Lance Laborde
96 S Old Creek Rd
Palos Park, IL 60464
Debbie Dyer
3968 Crestview Lane
Terre Haute, IN 47805
James T Lipe
765 Kathleen Rd
Duquoin, IL 62832
Joan Easley
205 N College
Indianapolis, IN 46202
John Liptak
1307 Country Glen Lane
Carol Stream, IL 60188
Wilbert Fitch
16800 County Line Rd.
Hebron, IN 46341-9031
Ruth Maves
606 65th St
Clarendon Hills, IL 60514-1882
Becky Fuller
1675 Main St.
Ferdinand, IN 47532
Cheryl McGugan
13705 Bell Rd.
Lockport, IL 60441
Peggy Grcich
52091 Harvest Dr.
South Bend, IN 46637
Harry and Rose Mengelkamp
23648 Double Arch Rd.
New Douglas, IL 62074
Julie Gunn
1984 Davis Dr.
Franklin, IN 46131
Loretta Midden
1608 S 2nd St.
William E & Carolyn R Cramlett Springfield, IL 62704-3817
423 Sunrise Lane
Christine Moran
Rockford, IL 61107
34 W 56th St
Westmont, IL 60559-2302
James Daugherty
2913 Lovis St.
Franklin Park, IL 60131
Joan Downs
491 Silverleaf Blvd
Carol Stream, IL 60188
Joann L Drinkwater
65440 Richmond Ave.
Westmont, IL 60559
Rich Eyre
11618 McConnell Rd
Woodstock, IL 60098
Carrie A Finley
1312 Old Trenton Rd.
Highland, IL 62249
Geri A Grzan
PO Box 55
Monee, IL 60449
Burt Hochberg
1030 W Wrightwood Ave. #B
Chicago, IL 60614
Joann Hollensteiner
935 S Stough
Hinsdale, IL 60521
Richard Houser
200 S Main
Spaulding, IL 62561
John Knaus
2306 Quail Run
Rockford, IL 61103-1938
Ron Knop
501 W Corning
Peotone, IL 60468
Andy Kuenstler
16650 Kennedy Rd.
Auburn, IL 62615
William Henry
3415 Hays Ct.
South Bend, IN 46614-2333
Susan Hufford
8328 E 600 N
Monticello, IN 47960
Curtis Richrath
10519 Sir Durham
Mapleton, IL 61547
Kathleen Jillson
6147 Cleveland St.
Merrillville, IN 46410
Steven Sexauer
403 West Ridge
Columbia, IL 62236
Connie Kinkle
2304 Taylor Ave
Princeton, IN 47670
Bob Sirtak
9 Jason Dr.
Glen Carbon, IL 62034
Pauline Knotts
1421 E 47th St.
Anderson, IN 46031-2705
Eve Southwood
2708 A North Southport Ave
Chicago, IL 60614
Pam Marlow
9801 W 113th Ave
Cedar Lake, IN 46303
Steve & Bonnie Todd
1413 Halladay Ct.
Batavia, IL 60510
Pat & Dan Minton
1805 Valley Vista Dr.
Borden, IN 47106
Janet & Victoria Vinke
23849 Center Rd.
Frankfort, IL 60423
Cathy Parks
7366 Ellis Lake Rd.
Paragon, IN 46166
Linda Westerberg
35820 Gray Rd.
Cluster Park, IL 60481
Pat Pitts
975 Carmen Ct.
Greenwood, IN 46143-2516
Indiana
Marabelle M Reason
9441 W County Rd 400 N
Gaston, IN 47342-9797
John and Carla Bontranger
23650 Anthony Rd.
Cicero, IN 46034
Randy Clark
12449 S Co Rd 300E
Muncie, IN 47302
Keith Cunningham
8738 East 41st Place
Indianapolis, IN 46226-5513
Rose Deig
3625 Hernden Dr.
Evansville, IN 47715
Brenda Rock
1112 S Oden Dr.
Greenfield, IN 46140
Vivian D Shields
8522 Marion Martin Rd
Charlestown, IN 47111
Robert M Shuman
T0688 Lilac Rd.
South Bend, IN 46628
Ronnie Stiles
3310 Quincy Rd.
Quincy, IN 47456
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
53
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Indiana
Welcome, New Region 2 Members! (continued)
(continued)
Martha Jean Trueblood
1648 N Quaker Rd.
Salem, IN 47167
Marvin Osborne
838 Oren Ct.
Gladwin, MI 48624
Erin Finkes
130 N 9th St.
Hebron, OH 43025
Mandie South
148 Terrence Dr.
Westerville, OH 44308
Jean Marklein
3919 Dorchester Dr
Janesville, WI 53546
John H Watson
11 Ski Hill Rd.
Ogden Dunes, IN 46368
Theodore J Popowitz
3811 Wedgewood
Bloomfield Hills, MI 48301
Sean Hayes
3515 Karikal Ct.
Westerville, OH 43081
Rebecca K Spratt
3792 E Western Reserve Rd
Poland, OH 44514
Joan Mosling
291 County Rd FF
Picket, WI 54964
Barbara White
1150 W 146th St.
Westfield, IN 46074-9609
Victor Rizzo
30101 30th St.
Paw Paw, MI 49079
Jane & Jerry Higgins
7775 Cheshire Rd.
Galena, OH 43021
Nancy K Widman
502 Sherwood Lane
Delta, OH 43515-1042
Roxanne Neat
48 S Blackhawk
Janesville, WI 53545
Joyce Wozniak
491 Haldale Dr.
Carmel, IN 46032
Teresa Smith
5100 Allingham Dr.
White Lake, MI 48383-1445
Carolyn M. Hughes
5829 Wildrose Drive
Akron, OH 44319
Heidi Willet
8995 Woodview Dr.
Cincinnati, OH 45231
Kay Payne
2533 Bradford Ave
Janesville, WI 53545
George & Linda Wright
7640 East Hurst Rd.
Pekin, IN 47165
Lori Stevenson
11152 Foley Rd.
Fenton, MI 48430
Linda Jenney
681 Hunt Valley Dr.
Reynoldsburg, OH 43068
David G Young
1622 Parcher Rd.
Bucyrus, OH 44820
Jim Rattray
4224 S Victorian Lane
Beloit, WI 53511
Michigan
Joy Stimac
232 Pinnacle Dr.
Lake Orion, MI 48360-2480
Allie Jensen
1030 Clubview Blvd.
Worthington, OH 43235
Lori Zimmerman
8225 Taway Rd.
Radnor, OH 43066
Eleanor Rodini
1632 Adams St.
Madison, WI 53711-2140
Barb Theniki
7822 S Croswell
Newaygo, MI 49337
Phyllis Jones
1701 Hamilton-Richmond Rd.
Hamilton, OH 45013
Wisconsin
Shirley Sanwick
RT 3 Box 226
Viroqua, WI 54665
Jack Wolfe
5370 E Washington Rd
Clare, MI 48617-9612
Jennifer Kepler
4690 Harrisburg Pike
Grove City, OH 43123
Tamra Dauma
7440 124th Ave
Holland, MI 49424-9424
Elbert & Laura Davis
3296 Will Carleton Rd
Flat Rock, MI 48134
Edward & Leslie Diliberto
11657 Ridge Dr.
Shelby Twp., MI 48315
Susan Higgins Dushane
1205 Wynnstone Dr.
Ann Arbor, MI 48105
Dave Evick
PO Box 9
Lawrence, MI 49064-0009
Robert A Ann R Fordeck
9717 Newburg Rd
Tecumseh, MI 49286
Judith Fuller
5656 N 7th St.
Kalamazoo, MI 49009
Janet Groth
11126 Lange Rd.
Bridgeman, MI 49106
Pat Harris
31034 Cooley
Westland, MI 48185
Paul Hartlieb
1460 E Twinbrook Dr.
DeWitt, MI 48820
Nicole Keeton
523 Parkdale
Royal Oak, MI 48073
Connie Kinder Kerr
3715 River Pines Dr.
Ann Arbor, MI 48103-9517
Francine V Knocke
29443 Cove Creek
Farmington Hills, MI 48334
Sharon O’Donnell
22717 Clairwood St
St Clair Shores, MI 48080
Ohio
Helen Alty
8508 County Rd 28
Zanesfield, OH 43360
Mitchell Anderson
230 Mulberry St.
Perrysburg, OH 43551
Martha Bell
5974 Boston Rd.
Valley City, OH 44280-9339
Shannon Black
11449 Chardon Rd.
Chardon, OH 44024-9374
Cleston Blanton Jr.
7695 Wethersfield Dr.
Westchester, Ohio 45069
Pat & Larry Bullen
5711 CR 13
Centerburg, OH 43011
Thomas F Carroll
Milagros Girst
5428 Blue Ash Rd.
Columbus, OH 43229-3632
John Chapek
15217 Woodbrook
Maple Heights, OH 44137
Allan Davis
1500 1 Schrelber Rd.
Cleveland, OH 44137
Ronald E and Virginia L Davis
1855 Perry Lane
Frankfort, OH 45628-9591
Marie Dunlap
7059 Basil Western Rd.
Canal Winchester, OH 43110
Page54 Spring/Summer2000
Tracy Lorence
3786 Williams
Brunswick, OH 44212
Marcia J Marks
231 N Spring St.
Bluffton, OH 45817-1109
Elaine McLean
323 W Chestnut St.
Oxford, OH 45056
Carol Miracle
10052 Pippin Rd.
Cincinnati, OH 45231
Linda Mounts
2195 Cedar Hill Rd.
Canal Winchester, OH 43110
Barbara Oplinger
96 N 40th St.
Newark, OH 43055
Cathy O’Neal
2835 Windsor Rd.
Orwell, OH 44076
Kathleen Proper
2889 Rohrer Rd.
Wadsworth, OH 44281-9533
Sharon Reynolds
691 Southern Bell Blvd
Beaver Creek, OH 45434
Jill Ruschau
8640 Concord Rd.
Delaware, OH 43015-9264
Thomas E Schoen
c/o Vintage Gardens
8305 Fremont Pike
Perrysburg, OH 43551
Jena Berg
N56 W29318 West View Dr.
Hartland, WI 53029-9202
Lisa W Cook
10506 Berberg Rd.
Amherst, WI 54406
Kurt Dega
6798 Dunlap Hollow Rd.
Mazomanie, WI 53560
Carol Fredericks
5846 County Rd PP
Avoca, WI 53506
Sally Gleason
714 Huron Hill
Madison, WI 53711-2955
Song Sparrow Perennial Farm
12929 Rye Rd E
Avalon, WI 53505
Geri Summerbell
2525 Bradford Ave.
Janesville, WI 53545
Barbara Szpek
W 228 S9305 Big Bend Dr.
Big Ben, WI 53103
Matt Wahoske
W6003 Wangsness Rd.
Deforest, WI 53532-9702
Linda J. Grant
6600 Bittersweet Rd
Wausau, WI 54401
Gretchen Hanneman
7236 S Loomis Rd.
Wind Lake, WI 53185
Marion Johansen
S 13679 Cty Rd Z
Mondovi, WI 54755
Kathleen Karcher
N9257 Deerpath Rd.
East Troy, WI 53120
Roxie Kruschek
752 Blue Spruce Lane
Hudson, WI 54016-7673
Cindy Larry
N140 W17603 Cedar Lane
Richfield, WI 53076
Werner Last
9788 N West Badger Hgts
Edgerton, WI 53534
Sandra J Lemmer
W162 N9917 Mayflower Rd
Germantown, WI 53025
Listing reflects
those new AHS members received since
the end of July 99 up
to and including the
listing received dated
February 23, 2000, to
be published in the
Spring/Summer edition of the Region 2
newsletter.
AHSRegion2/GreatLakesNewsletter
Region 2 Local Club Listing
Bay Area Daylily Buds
Leo Bordeleau, President
472 Rose Hill Drive
Oneida, Wisconsin 54155
920-869-2540
Black Swamp Hosta and Daylily Society
Don Bixler, President
2550 Cherry Ridge Drive
Fremont, Ohio 43420
419-355-8116
[email protected]
Central Illinois Daylily Club
Michael Fawkes, President
585 Cherry
Jacksonville, Illinois 62650
217-243-7004
Central Michigan Daylily Society
Bruce Kovach, President
5501 S. Red Oak Road
Beaverton, Michigan 48612-8513
517-689-3030
[email protected]
Chicagoland Daylily Society
Kimberly Kaufman, President
PO Box 581
Lincolnshire, Illinois 60069
847-634-2164
Hosting Region 2 Summer Meeting 2000
Daylily Society of Southern Indiana
John Habermel, President
3619 Wagner Drive
Floyds Knobs, Indiana 47119
[email protected]
Fort Wayne Daylily Society
J. Paul Downie, President
8207 Seiler Road
Fort Wayne, Indiana 46806
219-493-4601
[email protected]
Grand Valley Daylily Society
Allison Tgiros, President
1124 Fallingbrook S. E.
Kentwood, Michigan 49508
616-455-1099
Email contact:
(Jan Burd) [email protected]
Greater Cincinnati Daylily &
Hosta Society
John Duke, President
223 Kearney
Cincinnati, Ohio 45216
513-821-9163
Email: [email protected]
Hosting Region 2 Meeting in 2001
Hoosier Daylily Society Inc.
James E. Shields, President
17808 Grassy Branch Road
Nobelsville,, Indiana 46060
317-896-3925
[email protected]
Indiana Daylily-Iris Society
Ronald R. Paye, President
6508 Kellum Drive
Indianapolis, Indiana 46221
317-856-6867
Kalamazoo Area Daylily Society
J. Gus Guzinski, President
8814 West H. Avenue
Kalamazoo, Michigan 49009
616-375-4489
Madison County Daylily Society
Janice Hammers, President
2140 Harrison
Granite City, IL 62040
618-797-6038
Co-hosting Region 2 Summer Meeting 2003
MetropolitanColumbusDaylilySociety
Pete Mondron
411 Ridgedale Drive
Circleville, Ohio 43113
740-474-1729
[email protected]
Miami Valley Daylily & Hardy
Perennial Society
Shirley Farmer, President
30 Schell Road
Wilmington, Ohio 45177
937-382-7789
[email protected]
North Shore Iris & Daylily Society
Alice Simon, President
2516 Scott Street
Des Plaines, Illinois 60018
847-827-6541
Ohio Daylily Society
Rosemarie Foltz, President
4418 Dueber Avenue SW
Canton, Ohio 44706-4558
330-484-1052
Prairieland Daylily Society
Southern Indiana Daylily, Hosta,
Daffodil & Iris Society
Mark Cline, President
5289 S. Harrell Road
Bloomington, Indiana 47401
812-824-9216
Southern Michigan Hemerocallis Society
Phyllis Cantini, President
3140 Elder Road North
Orchard Lake, Michigan 48324-2416
248-363-2352
[email protected]
Hosting 2002 AHS National Convention
Southwestern Illinois Hemerocallis Society
Lu Dickhaut, President
PO Box 374
Carlinville, Illinois 62626
217-854-3418
Co-hosting Region 2 Summer Meeting
2003
Southwestern Illinois Daylily Club
Agnes Miller, President
1560 Johnson Road
Granite City, Illinois 62040
618-877-2983
Southwestern Indiana Daylily Society
Robert E. Kraft, President
14601 Old State Road
Evansville, Indiana 47711
812-867-3235
[email protected]
The Daylily Society of Southeast Wisconsin
Don Coshun
W266 S5185 River Road
Waukesha, Wisconsin 53186
262-547-2408
[email protected]
The Wisconsin Daylily Society
Hiram Pearcy, President
407 Lincoln St.
Verona, Wisconsin 53593-1529
608-845-9249
[email protected]
Randall Klipp, President
34 Jordan Drive
Bourbonnais, Illinois 60914
815-932-6650
Spring/Summer 2000 Page
55
The Garden of Pat and Chuck Bell, St. Charles, Illinois
Photo: Rosemary Balazs
American Hemerocallis Society
Gisela Meckstroth, Region 2 Editor
6488 Red Coach Lane
Reynoldsburg, OH 43068-1661
Nonprofit Organization
U.S. Postage PAID
Lancaster, OH 43130
Permit No. 235